Hackers find a way to get into every corner of the internet and Microsoft’s antitrust-busting ‘Browser Poll’, due to launch in Europe next week, could be no different.
Computer security firm Sophos has issued a warning that hackers could exploit the scheme to trick users with fake browser choice screens.
Microsoft’s scheme was introduced to appease the European Commission which was investigating Microsoft’s ‘unfair advantage’ in the browser market due to Internet Explorer being bundled with Windows. Set to launch gradually roll out across Europe from next week onwards, the scheme will give Windows users the opportunity to choose from 12 different browsers (see screenshots here).
However, hackers could take advantage of the situation, Sophos is warning. “There is a real danger that cybercriminals might attempt to take advantage of this initiative by creating bogus browser choice screens that could pop up on innocent users’ PCs and potentially lead them to a malicious download”, says Graham Cluley, a senior technology consultant at Sophos.
While security firms are keen to label virtually any online technology as a risk (it’s good for business) there certainly is a chance this will play out to be true.
Clued-up internet users, already used to try alernative browsers would be unlikely to be fooled by hackers’ fake browser windows. Average users, however, may well be aware that something to do with browser selection is going on and believe that a fake screen was the real deal.















I guess the EU have only themselves to blame for their own idiocy.
The irony being, if they were already running Firefox then they wouldn't get malicious pop-ups.
Did you see the “Perfect Storm of Idiocy” that happened last week? ReadWriteWeb published a piece on Facebook that ranked highly for the search term “Facebook login”. Literally hundreds of idiots who apparently get to their Facebook login via Google search (!) rather than by, you know, going to Facebook.com directly, mistakenly found their way to the ReadWriteWeb article, couldn't find where they were supposed to log in, and left whiny complaints in the comments.
Hundreds of them.
http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_w…
Gee, I wonder how many users are going to have trouble with the browser choice? Or how many would notice if they were redirected by hackers to a site called “PIRATE Browser, home of Ye Hackers and Identitey Thiefes”
i don't understand why the EU is making microsoft do this. hopefully it doesn't happen in the usa. anyway somebody has already started a petition to microsoft to not do it:
http://www.petitiononline.com/t647lf75/petition…
I would think that simply having the top 3 browsers come already installed (microsoft IE, Mozilla FF and Google Chrome…sorry no two letter abbreviation for that one) would make more sense. Anyone that wanted a different browser after that could do so at their leisure