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UPDATE : C|NET – gebruikt trojans in de installers

Na een storm van lawaai op the interwebs is er vanuit C|Net een reactie gekomen. In het geval van NMAP is de installer aangepast, wat dan op zich nog niets zegt over andere bestanden die je bij C|Net kan downloaden. Ook een aantal bedrijven heeft inmiddels afstand genomen van de werkwijze.

Zie hier [1]voor de eerdere informatie.

Fyodor van NMAP geeft de volgende update  :

Hi Folks.  A lot has happened since yesterday's email about
Download.com's antics (http://seclists.org/nmap-hackers/2011/5 [2]) and I
wanted to send a quick update.

First of all, several people complained about my angry tone and my
telling Download.com to "F*ck" themselves.  I appologize to anyone
offended.  But if you ever spend more than 14 years creating free
software as a gift to the community, only to have it used as bait by a
giant corporation to infect your users with malware, then you may
understand my rage.

The good news is that many users are sick and tired of having their
machines hijacked by malware.  Especially by CNET Download.Com, which
still says on their own adware policy page:

  "In your letters, user reviews, and polls, you told us bundled
   adware was unacceptable--no matter how harmless it might be. We want
   you to know what you're getting when you download from CNET
   Download.com, and no other download site can promise that."
   --http://www.cnet.com/2723-13403_1-461-16.html [3]

Um, what people WANT when they download Nmap is Nmap itself.  Not to
have their searches redirected to Bing and their home page changed to
Microsoft's MSN.

Speaking of which, Microsoft emailed me today.  They said that they
didn't know they were sponsoring CNET to trojan open source software,
and that they have stopped doing it.  But the trojan installer uses
your Internet connection to obtain more "special offers" from CNET,
and they immediately switched to installing a "Babylon toolbar" and
search engine redirect instead.  Then CNET removed that and are now
promoting their own "techtracker" tool.  Apparently the heat is so
high that even malware vendors are refusing to have any more part in
CNET's antics!  But if CNET isn't stopped, the malware vendors will
come crawling back eventually and CNET will be there to receive them.

There have been dozens of news articles in the last day and hundreds
of outraged comments on blogs, Twitter, Facebook, etc.  In the midst
of all this terrible PR, Download.com went in last night and quietly
switched their Nmap downloads back to our real installer.  At least
for now.  But that isn't enough--they are still infecting the
installers for thousands of other packages!  For example, they have
currently infected the installer for a children's coloring book app:

http://download.cnet.com/Kea-Coloring-Book/3000-2102_4-10360620.html [4]

Have they no shame at all??!

I've created a page with the situation background, links to the news
articles, and the latest updates:

http://insecure.org/news/download-com-fiasco.html [5]

Feel free to share it.  Together, I hope we can get Download.Com to
apologize and cease this reprehensible behavior!

Cheers,
Fyodor