Anti-spyware organisation
StopBadware.org
today added four software programs to its
Badware
Watch List, which aims to name and shame applications that contain embedded
malware.
The reports are the most recent in a series released by
Harvard
Law School's
Berkman
Center for Internet & Society and
Oxford
University's
Oxford
Internet Institute as part of an ongoing effort to battle malicious spyware
programs.
"Today we are identifying four more applications pointed out by consumers
that failed our tests for badware," said John Palfrey, co-director of
StopBadware.org and executive director of the Berkman Center.
"We hope that the light shed on these programs will encourage these and other
application developers to change their deceptive ways.
"These reports, along with the others listed on our Badware Watch List, will
hopefully serve as an effective tool to help consumers make a more informed
decision before they download one of these applications."
The organisation warned that malware, or badware as it prefers to describe
it, plagues millions of people by turning their computers into machines to spy
on them and steal personal or private information, or bombard them with unwanted
pop-up advertising.
"We need to ramp up ways to aggressively and accurately judge code," said
Jonathan Zittrain, co-director of StopBadware.org and professor of internet
governance and regulation at Oxford University.
"By helping people know the hallmarks of bad code, we can help maintain an
internet where code that's good can thrive, even if it comes from obscure or
amateur sources."
The first program added to the StopBadware.org list is FunCade, a gaming
software application that comes bundled with adware programs BullsEye and
NaviSearch.
While FunCade claims that is has "no spyware" its components are labelled
malware, spyware, or a Trojan by most popular anti-malware applications.
In addition, removing the FunCade software does not automatically uninstall
the bundled adware and spyware programs.
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