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Hi Folks,
Google, Live,
Yahoo run dubious scanner ads
By Scott Dunn
You've heard of "adware" and "spyware" and the antispyware
products that are designed to eliminate them.
A third category
of software - "rogue antispyware" - promotes itself deceptively and yet is
allowed to advertise on such major search engines as Google, Yahoo, and
Microsoft's Live.com.
Spyware Warrior
publishes 'rogue' software list
For years, a Web
site known as Spyware Warrior has been at the forefront of
exposing fraudulent and misleading antispyware products. Its page of
so-called Rogue/Suspect Anti-Spyware Products names scores
of products that exhibit suspicious behaviors.
Many of these
curious downloads, according to Spyware Warrior, install the very problems
they claim to cure, generate false positives to trick users into buying a
"remedy," and use aggressive or misleading advertising.
Sadly, you
can find ads for many of these suspect antispyware products on popular
search engines. Typically, these ads appear as "sponsored links,"
"sponsored sites," or "sponsor results" on Google, Yahoo, and Windows Live
(the search engine behind Microsoft's MSN.com). The ads are paid for by
the software companies and appear whenever a keyword in a search matches
one that the advertiser has bid on.
Search ads promote
false-positive scans
Table 1, below,
shows some of the products on Spyware Warrior's "rogue" list that
advertise on Google, Live.com, and Yahoo as of this
writing.
According to Spyware Warrior, each of the products in
Table 1 scans consumers' PCs for spyware but then presents "false
positives," reporting problems even when there are none. The purpose is to
convince you to buy the advertiser's product to "solve" the situation the
scan found.
Spyware Warrior also accuses two of the products in the
table - PAL Spyware Remover and SpySpotter - of aggressive or deceptive
advertising.
Table 1. Questionable ads found on
Google, Windows Live, and Yahoo
|
Product |
Google |
Live |
Yahoo |
|
AdwareDeluxe |
Yes |
- |
Yes |
|
AdwarePatrol |
Yes |
- |
Yes |
|
ETD
Scanner |
Yes |
- |
Yes |
|
PAL
Spyware Remover |
Yes |
- |
Yes |
|
SpySpotter |
Yes |
- |
Yes |
|
AlertSpy |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
|
Allume
Internet Cleanup |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
|
SpyBouncer |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
|
SpyOnThis |
Yes |
Yes |
Yes |
In some cases,
ironically, search engines display ads for these products side-by-side
with ads offering to remove the same product from victims'
PC.
Try a search for spyonthis in Google. You'll not only
find an ad for the product from its "official site," you'll also find
several ads that say, "Remove SpyOnThis" and "SpyOnThis
Removal."
To confuse matters further, some search-engine ads come
from sites that pose as neutral software reviewers but actually are merely
resellers for the questionable products.
For example, AdwarePatrol
and PAL Spyware Remover are featured in Yahoo ads that read "AdwarePatrol
Good or Bad?" and "PAL Spyware Remover Good or Bad?" The ads link to a
site named SpyDiagnostic.com, which appears to provide an objective review
of the products. Clicking the link, however, takes you to a page that's
identical to the main page of the product itself.
Using a safe-site
tool such as McAfee's Site Advisor provides you with some
protection against ads for suspicious antispyware products. Site Advisor,
for example, flags AdwarePatrol.com and Palsol.com (the site behind PAL
Spyware Remover) as undesirable or negative. The tool, however, gives a
green light to the SpyDiagnostic.com version of the same sites.
Search engine ad
policies not enforced
Google, Yahoo,
and Live.com all have policies that prohibit ads for deceptive products.
Yet these search engines accept advertising for products found by Spyware
Warrior to be "rogue" software.
Yahoo's editorial guidelines for
sponsored searches instruct advertisers to "choose a display URL that
accurately reflects the site found at your submitted landing page." If you
search for allume internet cleanup you see an ad with the URL
www.stuffit.com displayed. But click on the ad and you're taken
instead to the Internet Cleanup page on the Allume Web site.
Both
products, StuffIt and Internet Cleanup, are owned by the same company.
Site Advisor gives a red flag (undesirable) to the Allume and Internet
Cleanup pages. But it gives a green light to the StuffIt product
page.
Asked about these apparent policy violations, a Yahoo
representative said, "When these sorts of claims are brought to our
attention, we evaluate them in light of our existing guidelines and take
appropriate action."
Diana Adair, a spokeswoman for Google, said:
"If we become aware of a product being advertised using AdWords that uses
false positives to mislead users into purchase, we will disallow the ads
as soon as possible. Google is committed to ensuring the safety and
security of our users and our advertisers. We actively work to detect and
remove such rogue security sites in both our ad network and in our search
results. We have manual and automated processes in place to detect and
enforce these policies."
A Microsoft spokesman, Brad van Niekerk,
wrote: "Any software - not just Spyware - that is downloaded or takes an
action not expressly chosen by the user is against the terms of conditions
and not allowed. We are constantly looking into Spyware and if we find
advertisers or publishers who violate the terms of our policies we will
take their ads down." He added, "We have no plans to change any background
mechanism on Live Search advertisers at this time."
I sent e-mails
last week seeking comments from the makers of the products listed in Table
1. By press time, I hadn't received responses from any of the
companies.
Consumers rely on search engines not only to find basic
information but also to locate safe, helpful products that live up to
their claims. The search engines have clearly taken the time to craft
nice-sounding policies to support that goal.
But for many
questionable antispyware products, enforcement of these policies is sadly
lacking. It's time for Google, Live, and Yahoo to look at their
advertisers and take immediate action against deceptive products instead
of accepting tainted ad dollars.
I'd like to thank reader Donald
Friend, who sent us information about scanning software that makes false
reports. We're sending him a gift certificate for a book, CD, or DVD of
his choice for submitting a tip that we printed. Send us your tips using
the Windows Secrets contact page.
More Next Friday, Chuckstr ----My Web Site----
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