Help | Contact | Forum | Affiliates | Press Purchase Download Features Screenshots Demo

Drudge Report accused of serving malware, again

For the second time in less than six months, visitors to the Drudge Report say they got malware in addition to the Web site's usual sensational headlines.

Matt Drudge denied that his site was infecting visitors, however it's likely that the malware is coming from ads delivered by a third-party ad network and not the site itself.

"I can personally vouch for disinfecting my mom's desktop yesterday after visiting this Web page, even taking a screenshot after beginning remedial steps to address the attempted infection," a CNET reader wrote in an e-mail early on Tuesday. "I'm an IT professional in South Carolina so I know and understand the technology involved."

The screenshot the reader provided to CNET shows a pop-up warning the viewer that the system is infected with malware and looks like a typical fake antivirus warning that criminals use to scare people into paying for software they don't need.

The reader, who asked to remain anonymous, said he did not know exactly where on the site his mother had clicked before the fake warning appeared.

It's very possible that the malware came via an ad. Many Web sites outsource the serving of their ads and ad networks have been used to deliver malware to sites since last year, affecting sites as prominent as The New York Times.

Read Original Story



News 5 months ago



Related Stories:

Fake Antivirus Software Uses Ransom Threats

Apple Ping network slammed with spam

FCC must make ISPs crack down on spammers and malware

China requires ID to buy mobile phone numbers

Huge Spamming Botnet Injured but Still Alive

25% Of Malware Spread Via USB Drives

Rustock Botnet Changes Tactics

92% of e-mail is spam - 41% from single source

Scammers hit Twitter, Facebook, send free iPad spam

'LOL is this you?' spam spreading via Facebook chat