MacKeeper May Have To Pay Millions In Class-Action Suit 41
jfruh writes: If you use a Mac, you probably recognize MacKeeper from the omnipresent popup ads designed to look vaguely like system warnings urging you to download the product and use it to keep your computer safe. Now the Ukranian company behind the software and the ads may have to pay millions in a class action suit that accuses them of exaggerating security problems in order to convince customers to download the software.
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it can't be true! (Score:1, Funny)
macs and mac users are prone to the same shady marketing gimmicks and software as windows users? no way. say it isn't so.
next thing you're gonna say they get viruses too? wtf is this world coming to?
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Eventually I grew tired of keeping them on the phone (I was at the office), so I said, "Oh, maybe the problem is that I'm on Linux a
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Pffft. More like 101%.
That's it? (Score:5, Funny)
They might get fined? That's it?
Can't they be sent to the Eastern Front to fight the Russians?
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You do realize that MacKeeper is a Russian product, right? Amusingly, Kaspersky is the one AV outfit that outright blocks them.
MacKeeper works via the partnerka system -- affiliate downloads. Many of their affiliates are from the Russian underworld, and own other properties such as porn and warez sites.
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MacKeeper = Ukrainian
Kaspersky = Russian
Re: That's it? (Score:1)
Aren't this distinction likely to become a moot point soon anyway? Like the old geography maps we used when I was in school...
Re:That's it? (Score:4, Insightful)
They might get fined? That's it?
Exactly, "exaggerating security problems" - yeah, how about fraud?
Can't they be sent to the Eastern Front to fight the Russians?
In the USA, they would be given an award and probably sue Apple based on a patent titled "METHOD OF ALERTING USERS TO SECURITY PROBLEMS ON A COMPUTER."
What, fraud is illegal? (Score:1)
Any chance they can do something about all those other fraudulent ads?
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Any chance they can do something about all those other fraudulent ads?
Try using an ad blocker, popup blocker, and NoScript.
Pennsylvania (Score:3)
Class Action Suit filed in PA.
Good luck getting company in Ukraine to cough up any money. It's not like they're part of the EU or something....
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It is exactly like this. And even without it, having this lawsuit settled is cue enough.
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Re: Pennsylvania (Score:2)
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I'm guessing Kromtech would like to continue to market in the United States, not have its representatives entangled in in hearings for violating the injunction(s) that will inevitably be sought, and not have any property that enters into or is within the U.S. seized in attempts to satisfy a default judgment against them.
But what do I know...
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Yes please (Score:4, Insightful)
If this pans out perhaps we can get legal precedence against the horrible online ads that tell you there were 349856 problems detected with your computer.
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The MacKeeper ads I see plainly advertise MacKeeper as trying to fix the problems, not the fake-popups that scream 6t2987629 problems were detected like on Windows...
Still, it's funny when I see the ads and they say to run their tool. My Mac is so ancient that it's not even running a compatible version of OS X. (Not really Apple's fault here. It's 12 years
Profit (Score:2)
Sounds like the standard make $10m in revenue, pay $1m in fines, make $9m in profit. And no one actually goes to jail.
Wait, we can just sue these a-holes? (Score:2)
Can we sue Mindspring next?
download.com (Score:1)
I think download.com and Google's banner ads should be hit the same way with all the deceptive "download" ads that look too much like the download button you're supposed to click.
let's keep it rolling (Score:2)
What pop-up ads?? (Score:2)