Starbuck Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 A new scam employing clickjacking techniques is spreading on Facebook and lures people to surveys with an intriguing video about girl secrets. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v708/starbuck50/new/5-Things-Girls-Do-Likejacking-Scam-Spreading-on-Facebook-2.jpg The victims are forced to Like and Share a rogue page with an associated message that reads: "5 things girls do before she meets her boyfriend !! " The link takes users to a Facebook-looking page hosted on an external domain, which warns that the content is "Only for 18+ users – NO ADS." Both the 18+ only and the no ads parts are lies. First of all, there is no video, only an image mimicking an embedded video player. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v708/starbuck50/new/5-Things-Girls-Do-Likejacking-Scam-Spreading-on-Facebook-3.jpg If clicked, this image forces the user to like the page via a technique commonly known as clickjacking, but technically called user interface redressing. Clickjacking abuses legit programming methods to hide page elements, such as the Like button, by making it transparent. The button is then positioned on top of an element the user is interested in, like the fake video player, so when they think they press play, they unknowingly like the page. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v708/starbuck50/new/5-Things-Girls-Do-Likejacking-Scam-Spreading-on-Facebook-4.jpg To differentiate attacks employing this technique, from others that use rogue applications or other methods to achieve the same result, people refer to them as likejacking. However, tricking users into spamming their friends is only the beginning. The ultimate goal of these scams is to convince people to complete deceptive "surveys" or "offers," which subscribe them to premium rate services. For every victim who ends up signing up, the scammers receive a generous commission from affiliate marketing companies. In some cases, these firms are unaware that their systems are being abused, while in others, they are hand in hand with the scammers. If you have fallen victim to such a scam, make sure to remove the spam messages from your wall and unlike the rogue pages. Source: '5 Things Girls Do' Likejacking Scam Spreading on Facebook - Softpedia Quote Member of:UNITE
RandyL Posted October 31, 2010 Posted October 31, 2010 Thanks Starbuck. It's to bad people don't take the time to remove such posts from their wall after the fact. Pople quit clicking on everything you see on facebook. Quote We are all members helping other members. Please return here where you may be able to help someone else. After all, no one knows everything and you may have the answer that someone needs.Get help with computer problems. Join Free PC Help here Donations are welcome. Read Here
Starbuck Posted October 31, 2010 Author Posted October 31, 2010 People quit clicking on everything you see on facebook. Sadly it seems that most people have to 'like' everything sent to them. It just seems that it looks good to have the most 'Liked' sites etc on Facebook. When in reality.... these people are probably the most infected or are causing the most problems for their friends. If people took the time to read this link they would be more aware of social networking problems. http://extremetechsupport.com/forum/security-warnings-and-alerts/10635-top-10-dos-and-donts-social-networking.html Quote Member of:UNITE
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