The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Comments on: Miscreants subvert search results to punt malware

Citation, please 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 16:39 GMT

"Search engines such as Google give priority to sites linked to from popular web destinations."

Possible defence 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 16:45 GMT

Would using scandoo help to protect against some of the malware?

Indeed. 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 17:27 GMT

Thumb Up

Ah - alternative router firmware, cotton gins and slavery - three great tastes that go great together.

On to. Two words. 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 18:07 GMT

I don't mind mobe and lappy, but please stop using *onto. There is no such word.

-A.

Citation supplied 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 18:55 GMT

Does http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PageRank explain what you want to know?

Onto? 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 19:15 GMT

Onto is a preposition. check word web.

Google should be scanning sites 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 19:41 GMT

Seeing as Google spiders sites anyway, why aren't they also looking for well known exploits/viruses/Trojans at the same time. It's not too hard to imagine that being possible with their resources. They could flag or exclude questionable sites in their results or penalise the page rank. It's not like this isn't something you could automate, unlike - say - Google images, which must be more resource intensive to manage.

You might argue that they have some obligation to check that they aren't leading you into malware in much the same way a taxi driver should normally not drive you into a tree.

Onto 

Posted Wednesday 28th November 2007 19:50 GMT

http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=onto-

Standardized LART Form 

Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 04:38 GMT

Pirate

Standardized LART Form for poor computer security articles. Released under the GPL v2 for everyone to use. See http://www.gnu.org/

Check all that apply to this article. You may have to delete unchecked items to fit in the space alloted by the author's comment form.

For a copy of this form, visit:

http://www.antiwindowscatalog.com/index.asp?mode=rant&id=50

======Indices

Troll-O-Meter: (1 out of 10) You're operating a toll bridge out of season without a permit

Flame Meter / Threat Level: (0 out of 10) Paper bag full of air

BS Meter: (4 out of 10) "We are not in the business of scaring people"

======Conditions of exploitation

Your article assumes the victim:

[X] Uses Microsoft Windows [X] ...with Administrator access [X] ...without regularly visiting Windows Update [X] ...and turns off User Account Control (Vista)

The problem described was addressed:

[X] More than a month ago by a simple workaround [X] ...more than five years ago [X] By the current version of whatever has this problem [X] ...by the previous version

Reproducing and/or exploiting the problem requires:

[X] Clicking a malicious web link [X] ...while logged on as an Administrator

Exploiting the problem also requires:

[X] Google [X] Blogspot / Blogger / other major blog site

======Umbrella salesmen predicting bad weather

Your article cites:

[X] A computer security firm

The quoted person / firm / organization:

[X] Has a fix for the problem for a price [X] Predicts the death of the Internet as a result [X] Has unearthed a diabolical conspiracy to destroy the Internet [X] ...or whatever

======Punishments

For crafting this article, you deserve:

[X] To be interviewed by... [X] ...Rob Rosenberger

Before writing another security article, you must:

[X] Ask one or more real security experts first [X] ...that don't work for computer security firms (Yes, they do exist.) [X] Ask a critic of whoever you're going to quote [X] Try reproducing the problem yourself [X] ...while logged on with a Limited (XP) or Standard (Vista) account [X] ...while leaving User Account Control (Vista) turned ON

On to is TWO prepositions. 

Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 14:57 GMT

http://www.guardian.co.uk/styleguide/page/0,,184819,00.html

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/tools_and_services/specials/style_guide/article986733.ece