posty Posted September 15, 2010 Share Posted September 15, 2010 http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20100915/t...stoblackmailyou In an era where online privacy seems like an oxymoron, is it so bad to have your browsing history publicly available? Or to pay less than $20 to have these details removed from the Internet? Several Trojan horses spreading around the Internet these days spam your entire address book with bogus messages and attempt to delete your computer’s security software. But the Kenzero Trojan out of Japan goes further than pretending to be a legitimate program: Hackers behind the program not only post your browser history, favorites, illegally-downloaded porn, and clipboard content to a public Website, they demand payment of about $18 to remove the personal details of your browsing history. Kenzero is a Trojan of the “ransomware” variety, where a malicious program masquerading as a game registration window takes your personal details then attempts to extort money out of you. The Trojan then posts that you’ve been downloading illegal Hentai (explicit anime) games, and that instead of just being out $20, you’ll find that scammers have sold your credit card information to the highest bidder. How does Kenzero spread? Mostly via the Winny file-sharing network, which has approximately 200 million users). Though if you’re illegaling downloading computer games, why would you give personal details to a pirated piece of software? It's food for thought. While you’re mulling that, there’s even a paper on similar Japanese scams being presented at the upcoming Association for Computing Machinery Computer and Communications Security conference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
matt770 Posted September 15, 2010 Share Posted September 15, 2010 http://news.yahoo.com/s/pcworld/20100915/t...stoblackmailyou In an era where online privacy seems like an oxymoron, is it so bad to have your browsing history publicly available? Or to pay less than $20 to have these details removed from the Internet? Several Trojan horses spreading around the Internet these days spam your entire address book with bogus messages and attempt to delete your computer’s security software. But the Kenzero Trojan out of Japan goes further than pretending to be a legitimate program: Hackers behind the program not only post your browser history, favorites, illegally-downloaded porn, and clipboard content to a public Website, they demand payment of about $18 to remove the personal details of your browsing history. Kenzero is a Trojan of the “ransomware” variety, where a malicious program masquerading as a game registration window takes your personal details then attempts to extort money out of you. The Trojan then posts that you’ve been downloading illegal Hentai (explicit anime) games, and that instead of just being out $20, you’ll find that scammers have sold your credit card information to the highest bidder. How does Kenzero spread? Mostly via the Winny file-sharing network, which has approximately 200 million users). Though if you’re illegaling downloading computer games, why would you give personal details to a pirated piece of software? It's food for thought. While you’re mulling that, there’s even a paper on similar Japanese scams being presented at the upcoming Association for Computing Machinery Computer and Communications Security conference. Well I'm never going to stop downloading illegal Hentai, trojan be damned. I'm quite proud of my illegal Hentai collection. They say laughter is the best medicine, hogwash. Illegal Hentail brother. Believe it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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