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Spyware article The Ten Truth's About Spyware By Wayne Porter No one should be too paranoid, but an informed user is a safe user. Spyware has recently begun cascading into the computer market at an astonishing rate. Surprisingly there are a lot of misconceptions about what spyware really is and how dangerous it can be.
This is important and often made confusing by the media and privacy advocates. Many people have the common misconception that spy software is made by advertisers to profile their shopping and surfing habits. This is a false and potentially dangerous assumption. Adware may have spyware-like features, it may profile shopping habits, it is usually annoying, has the potential to be a security threat but it is nowhere near the security threat that real spyware can be. In short most Adware is not trying to capture your sëcret chats, e-mails or passwörds. It usually is trying to entice you to buy something by showing ads, throwing out pop-up windows, profiling your surfing habits or gathering broad and general information about you.
The latest "rage" among spyware vendors is the ability to let
the spy remotely connect to the target's computers. We have identified
several spyware programs opening a default port on the system and using
a hard-coded or default, easy to guess or easy to brute force password.
We have analyzed and carried out simulated attacks in this scenario. Hackers
can use a simple port scanning tool to scan entire networks and easily
penetrate affected machines.
The use of Spyware or key recorders is illegal in some countries. If you are thinking about spying on people's computers then think again. It may carry stiff lëgal penalties, up to and including prison time. In the U.S. installing a keylogger or spyware on someone's machine without their permission carries severe lëgal penalties. Unfortunately there are virtually no laws currently restricting an employer
from monitoring computers in the workplace for citizens of the United
States. The good news is there is pending legislation to tighten these
rules focusing on requiring notification of employees if their computer
activity is being monitored. As of today this disclosure is not required.
We know what you might be thinking; spy software seems rather "James Bondish" and beyond the reach of average users. This is not so. It is mass-marketed, cheap and very easy to acquire. You can find spyware for sale through Internet auctions, via e-mails (often sp@m), and all over the Web. You can even get spyware for frëe if you know where to look. There are no special technical skills needed to install these programs. A teenager can do it and according to reports received by ourselves and other anti-spyware vendors they sometimes do. Spy software companies have made it very easy for just about anyone to start spying. We have documented cases of children installing spyware on their parent's machines to circumvent parental control software. Fact #6: Spyware may be sold under legitïmate pretenses Many spy programs are marketed as "child monitoring systems"
when in fact they are bought by employers, spouses, and other individuals
for the sole purpose of gathering system and personal information without
a user's consent. Because of this "legitimacy" these programs
are often missed by anti-virus software designed to target viruses and
trojan horses. Let's be realistic, spy software makers know exactly why
people are really buying these programs.
Established spy software companies usually ask purchasers to agree through a EULA (End User License Agreement) not to monitor users without their knowledge and consent. You guessed it- most spies have absolutely no intention of letting users know they are under surveillance.
Spy software makers will go to great lengths to convince users they are 'untraceable' or they cannot be sniffed out by counter-surveillance probes. While spyware makers often use very sophisticated counter-detection and stealth technologies the vast majority of them can be scanned against and removed. If it is being sold on the commercial market- it can be targeted.
This is sad but shockingly true. Some spyware vendors have gone as far as to repurpose old Trojan horse programs found on technical minded boards and are selling them as new spy technology. (A Trojan horse is a malicious, security-breaking program disguised as something benign.)
While erasing usage history is useful to protect your privacy this type of protection is useless if your activity is being logged or snapshots are being taken of your computer use. Deleting history, files, cache and cookies cannot and will not protect you against the prying eyes of active spies on your machine.
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