Toolbox
Share on facebook Reddit del.icio.us Save to Yahoo! bookmarks Slashdot it Save to Windows live Save to MySpace science news feed Add to google
- size +

Internet pop-up "scareware purveyors" sued

Microsoft and Washington states top prosecutor have filed a lawsuit to stop scareware purveyors that trick people with pop-up messages claiming computers need critical repairs. Attorney General Rob McKenna pictured in 2006 and Microsoft filed against ...
Microsoft and Washington state's top prosecutor have filed a lawsuit to stop "scareware purveyors" that trick people with pop-up messages claiming computers need critical repairs. Attorney General Rob McKenna, pictured in 2006, and Microsoft filed against a pair of Texas businesses accused of sending invasive programs into computers to frighten people into buying a Registry Cleaner XP service.

Microsoft and Washington state's top prosecutor have filed a lawsuit to stop "scareware purveyors" that trick people with pop-up messages claiming computers need critical repairs.
Attorney General Rob McKenna and the US software giant filed suit on Monday against a pair of Texas businesses accused of sending invasive programs into computers to frighten people into buying a Registry Cleaner XP service.

McKenna said the lawsuit filed under the auspices of the state's Computer Spyware Act "has yanked the fear factor dial out of the hands of businesses that use scareware as a marketing tool and have spun it toward them."

The complaint accuses the operators of firms Branch Software and Alpha Red of sending incessant pop-up messages resembling system warnings to peoples' personal computers.

The messages read "CRITICAL ERROR MESSAGE! REGISTRY DAMAGED AND CORRUPTED," and instruct users to visit a Website to download Registry Cleaner XP.

The orchestrators of the campaign took advantage of a Windows operating system feature designed to let computer network administrators send notices to people using machines.

People that went to the Registry Cleaner website were offered a free computer scan that always reported finding "critical" errors, according to senior counsel Paula Selis, head of the attorney general's Consumer Protection High-Tech Unit.

Visitors were then invited to pay 39.95 dollars to have the purported computer problems fixed.

"We won't tolerate the use of alarmist warnings or deceptive 'free scans' to trick consumers into buying software to fix a problem that doesn't even exist," McKenna said.

Microsoft referred the case to McKenna's high-tech unit and helped put the case together.

"Microsoft is honored to assist," said Richard Boscovich, a senior attorney for the Washington-based company's Internet Safety Enforcement Team.

"Cybercrime continues to evolve, but with public/private collaboration such as this, we can work to champion tougher laws, greater public awareness and, ultimately, stronger protections for online consumers."

The suit demands that the "spyware purveyors" be barred from continuing the "deceptive" practice and be ordered to pay restitution to customers, civil penalties, and legal fees associated with the case.

Microsoft has filed 17 "civil spyware action" suits since the state's Computer Spyware Act was enacted in 2005. This is the seventh suit filed under the statute by McKenna's office.

Microsoft estimates that half of the computer crashes reported by callers to its customer support lines can be blamed on spyware fouling machines.

"Spyware has arguably become the biggest online threat to consumers and businesses since the advent of the Internet," McKenna's office said in a release.

© 2008 AFP
» Next Article in Technology - Internet: Have couch, will travel

would you recommend this story?

 

User Rating

4.8 out of 5 after 11 total votes
  • not at all
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • highly

Leave a Comment or

Rank filter

Move the slider to adjust rank threshold, so that you can hide some of the comments.
Posted by Mombo_Dogface 09/30/08 18:33
Rank: 5/5 after 9 votes
About time.
Posted by asoundlife 09/30/08 21:16
Rank: 2.8/5 after 8 votes
Maybe that should have been a big f**king hint to Microsoft that they should have fixed for Vista. Now we're stuck with another extremely vulnerable operating system. You don't see Linux users or Mac users with the same complaints do you? Hmmm. Come on MS, get in the game.. stop screwing your users in the first place.

Vista is nothing but an esthetically pleasing XP... with all the same flaws.
Posted by Sirussinder 09/30/08 21:37
Rank: 3.7/5 after 7 votes
You dont see it in Mac or Linux because there isnt enough people using those OS's to target.
Posted by gmurphy 10/01/08 05:17
Rank: 3.4/5 after 5 votes
actually, mac and linux are both unix systems. Unix systems are by their very nature inherently secure. Vistas main security measure, http://en.wikiped...mization was implemented on linux systems back in 2002
Posted by superhuman 10/01/08 10:24
Not rated yet.
Good go after them, but if microsoft did a better job the problem would not even exist.
Posted by KB6 10/01/08 15:09
Not rated yet.
"People that went to the Registry Cleaner website were offered a free computer scan that always reported finding "critical" errors, according to senior counsel Paula Selis, head of the attorney general's Consumer Protection High-Tech Unit.
Visitors were then invited to pay 39.95 dollars to have the purported computer problems fixed."
---

So they tell people that there is something "critically" wrong with their computers - when there's really nothing wrong with them - and then charge them to "fix" it? Isn't that flat-out fraud? How is that different from a mechanic telling you that your car has "critical problems" that need to be "fixed" and charging you for it when in fact there's nothing wrong with the car at all?
Posted by biohead 10/01/08 16:44
Not rated yet.
It is fraud... It is about time... It's almost certain that if more people were on Linux (yes we all know Unix systems) there would be a signifcant breach with Linux as well. It's a matter of time, and it's a matter of the level of desperation of these fraudsters.