Flashback Click Fraud Campaign Was a Bust 29
zarmanto writes "It seems the Flashback botnet has netted their creators nothing but frustration. Flashback was tagged early on by anti-virus vendors, who promptly sink-holed many of the command & control addresses, and essentially crippled the hacker's ability to control the vast majority of the Flashback botnet... but that's not the best part. The Flashback spawned click fraud campaign resulted in... nada! It seems that their pay-per-click affiliate may be on to their scheme, as they refused to pay out. Score one for the good guys, for once."
Who clicks on ads? (Score:2)
over 10 million ads on compromised computers but only a small percentage of users who were shown ads actually clicked them, with close to 400,000 ads being clicked
That's a very high click-through rate. What was it that enticed so many morons to click on an advertisement? Nobody I know ever clicks on that kind of crap.
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Modded troll, surprise surprise. One who speaks the truth is not a troll.
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"rigged badly"? you mean like the vote in Florida in Nov 2000?
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Re:Who clicks on ads? (Score:4, Insightful)
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It's okay, these supposed brilliant tech people that call everyone fools probably wouldn't know the first thing about fixing their car engine..... They take it to the mechanic, who's probably the 'fool' that clicks on ads.
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Exactly. People forget that computers and cars are basically required tools in modern society. You can get along never OWNING one, but it won't be long before you're required to USE one (even if it's not yours). Teaching them all the ins and outs of these required machines is a futile effo
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Fake buttons. So where can you generate lots of clicks, continually update the software to hide the source, hmm, flash based games.
If you going to cheat you might as well cheat big time, without breaking the law. So insert adds into games, that have to be clicked, that open a new background or re-open it in an already open background window.
So objective achieved lots of click throughs with the end user none the wiser or unhappy about making the clicks, as long as they want to play the game of course th
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I've installed a few plugins to FF which does just that, aside from AdBlock+ the other most helpful plugin is Greasemonkey, I too am sick and tired of websites changing their layout for the worse when they think they're doing their visitors a favour.
I don't profess to know how to write Greasemonkey scripts but I've managed to learn enough to copy'n'paste'n'modify
Good guys? (Score:1)
The only one who wins here is the ad affiliate.
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Yep, I'd bet on no refunds to the people who actually got clickfrauded.
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Yep, I'd bet on no refunds to the people who actually got clickfrauded.
Exactly. The other possibility is that the ad affiliate actually paid the botnet owner for the clickfraud to 'legitimize' extra charges to the advertisers.
A Bust? Not Likely (Score:3)
Let's not forget who we're dealing with here. Apple makes their business duping people and manipulating people into thinking thing's are magical. The heavy-handed way they deal with press is well known.
That said, all it takes is one "leaked" story or one bough-and-paid-for (or influenced) study or online news site to say that its a bust and poof! Malware makers will suddenly think it's not profitable to write malware for iOS/OS X.
So don't buy it. Apple has had a history of malware, and a record amount of malware and vulnerabilities in it's user software (Quicktime, ITunes, Safari, etc.).
Apple malware will rise. And their BS sandboxing method isn't gonna stop it.