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Saturday, April 24, 2010

McAfee False-Positive Attack: Exploited By Hackers

Criminals have been keen to take advantage of the critical update bug that affected McAfee users in the past few days.

A false-positive in McAfee's detection of the Wecorl.A virus caused hundreds of thousands of computers around the world to repeatedly reboot themselves, as the antivirus software mistakenly zapped the critical svchost.exe file.

To its credit, McAfee is discussing the problem on its online community forum, has apologized, withdrawn the buggy update, and advised customers on how to manually fix the affected computers.

But that hasn't stopped blackhat SEO hackers from creating poisoned Web pages that appear high in the search rankings if you hunt for information on the McAfee false-positive.

Clicking on one of these dangerous links can take you to a Website that harbors the Mal/FakeAV-BW scareware (also known as fake antivirus) attack, designed to trick you into believing you have a serious security problem on your computer -- and urging you to purchase or install other code from the hackers behind the scam.

If you have suffered from the false positive, then I suggest you visit McAfee's Website for advice -- and not to go clicking on unknown links.

More details about the fake antivirus attack associated with the McAfee false alarm can be found on this blog.

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