Most Dangerous Celebrities to Search For

According to a report published by McAfee, Jessica Biel is the #1 most dangerous celebrity to search for online…USA/Search terms like “Jessica Biel,” “Jessica Biel downloads,” “Jessica Biel wallpaper,” “Jessica Biel screen savers,” “Jessica Biel photos” and “Jessica Biel videos” ….etc have a 20% chance of landing on a sketchy site likely chock full of adware, viruses and nasty malware.
So if you are a celeb gossip junky or are cruising for the latest celebrity pictures, be careful !!!
Here’s the McAfee top 15 … i am very disappointed to hear that Beyonce was #2 for the second year in a row - She can do Better than that!  and Lindsay Lohan is a lowly #14:

1 Jessica Biel
2 Beyoncé
3 Jennifer Aniston
4 Tom Brady
5 Jessica Simpson
6 Gisele Bundchen –
7 Miley Cyrus –
8 Megan Fox, Angelina Jolie
9 Ashley
10 Brad Pitt
11 Reese
12 Britney Spears
13 Rihanna
14 Lindsay Lohan
15 Kim Kardashian

Online Ads and Internet Security

…The intersection of two of my favorite categories in the techie-sphere.

Just because a website is reputable doesn’t mean that the ad networks it uses is.

So you might have a favorite blog or site that you go to everyday.  And it is probably a very good, reputable site - which is why you go to it.  And one day, you see an ad that catches your eye so you click on it.  And then next thing you know…BOOM - you get hit by a virus and it’s days of internet and PC security scans and suffering.

I recently got hit by what my chums over at Symantec call a “drive by” virus.  All it takes is going to a site and then wham-o! your browser crashes and you get some nasty rootkit virus that tries to send hundreds of email copies of itself to your contacts in your address book and it hijacks your blog and other apps.  Scary, huh?  yea. very.

In case you are a total neewbie, you will know that clicking on an ad for the most part is safe and useful - it takes you to where you want to go - maybe to an interesting travel site promoting a deal, or perhaps an e-commerce site selling something you want.  But what if it takes you somewhere you don’t want to go?  like this ad does:

malicious-ad

Looks innocent enough…I’m happy with my German sinks from Duravit and am in the market for a new kitchen sink.

and hey!

is that a lady in a skimpy outfit hanging out by a German Sink?  <click>

And then I would have been redirected to a site that woulda given me another DriveBy virus.  How do I know?  I use both McAfee SiteAdvisor and Symantec’s equivalent on my Browser.  It does a decent job of screening me from going to nasty known sites.  Here’s the screenshot you get:

siteadvisor-redirect

That’s right, it says, “Why were you redirected to this page? When we tested, this site attempted to make unauthorized changes to our test PC by exploiting a browser security vulnerability. This is a serious security threat which could lead to an infection of your PC.”

So - here’s a couple of things to consider:

1) always update your browser with the latest and greatest patches - especially when they contain vulnerability fixes

2) use SiteAdvisor or some euqivalent plugin

3) only click on ads from networks that you know do a good job of Quality testing of their ads - e.g. Google or Microsoft or some other ad network that you have heard of…if you hover your mouse over the ad, on the lower left-hand corner of your browser you should see the redirect link - if it’s a microsoft served ad it will say something like “r.msn.com” if it’s a google ad, it should say something like “googleads.g.doubleclick.net”

be safe out there.

21 Apr 2009, 12:33pm
technology:
by chewbacca
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Woah

aaaaand, I’m back!

250px-hanpopcicle

So, I got a virus.

It came from a website.

It was a crummy website.

and i got totally pwned by it.

The reason for visiting the site is not as scintillating as you are probably imagining.

sorry!

Needless to say, i did not download anything nor click on anything…i simply went to the site.

aaand, according to the folks at Symantec, this site had a type of virus known as a heuristic worm.  it was NASTY.  I won’t bore you with the details, but needless to say, it was very bad.

bad worm!

It even, somehow, hijacked renchin.com.  Fearing that it would replicate itself onto my site and infect my dear readers, i called my hosting company who took a look at my domain and the files and the activity and the logs and the whatnots and they verified that, indeed, my site was infected and was doing crazy things.

SO.  I completely nuked my blog and am now in the process of rebuilding it.

better.

stronger.

safer.

don’t get squeemish.  you aren’t getting infected by visiting this site.  That’s the whole point.

Needless to say, be careful out there!