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3rd September 2010
02.09.2010 Browser malware hits Firefox and IE
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01.09.2010 Apple release security updates
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01.09.2010 Google fix Gmail email spam bug
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Identity Fraud Statistics
The United States takes the first spot by far with over 2.5 billion spam messages generated. Brazil and India fill in the top three, each sending out around 1.8 billion spams this year.
(AppRiver, Threat & Spamscape Report (Jan-June))
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Between January 1 and June 27 this year, the total number of data breaches recorded by the ITRC is 342, more than 69% greater than the same time period in 2007.
(The Identity Theft Resource Center (US), July 2008)
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ID THEFT PROTECT - News and Reviews 03/09/2010
Fake Firefox update is spyware
04.02.2010

IDENTITY THEFT and IDENTITY FRAUD News and views - This daily news service searches the web to bring you relevant news to your desktop


The successor program to the notorious Zango spyware Toolbar is being used to target users of Mozilla's Firefox with fake browser updates, a security company has alleged.

http://threatcenter.blogspot.com/2010/02/fake-firefox-update-pages-push ">According to a warning put out by eSoft, the reprised Hotbar app, run as of May last year by a new entity called Pinball Corp, is being fed to users via a fake but convincing Firefox update page. The update page - which users would come to through a search engine for the latest updates - looks identical to the genuine page in everything bar the version it is claiming to offer (3.5 where the most recent is 3.6) and some misspelling.

Windows users fooled into downloading and installing from the fake page will actually be getting a toolbar application that also hits the user with pop-up ads and a weather application in the system tray.

According to eSoft, the software is actually being fed without the direct knowledge of its creators, Pinball, which will likely be paying a third party affiliate for every install. As with the distribution of the original Zango Toolbar, how that install gets on to a user's PC is not their business.

Zango disappeared last April after several years in which it was accused of sneaking spyware on to users' PC without their consent, invariably by paying third parties to do the dirty work. In 2006, it was fined $3 million by the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for its actions.

It should be pointed out that what is at fault here is not the new toolbar app per se, but the way it is being distributed by a separate entity and installed under false pretences. As ever, an application becomes legitimate if the user consents to its installation having had the proposition explained in an accurate way, but that is certainly not happening in this instance.

Source: Mozilla / ID Theft Protect

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