Advertisers May Face Ridicule For Adware 166
An anonymous reader writes "A ZDNet article reports that the FTC may be gearing up to humiliate companies that advertise via adware." From the article: "The FTC would publicly announce and publish the name of a company that advertises using adware that installs itself surreptitiously on consumer PCs or using spyware, Leibowitz said. He would recommend publicly shaming advertisers to the other FTC commissioners if the adware problem doesn't decrease, he said."
Wet bus ticket (Score:5, Funny)
Wake me up when there's a public stoning.
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:5, Funny)
Dude, that would be awesome. However, man, I can't really see the DEA being chill with that. I mean, that would be a lot of weed.
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2, Funny)
that whole damn city block was covered with people.. and it was a good day for the people on the west side.... (off shore wind
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2)
clicky [marijuananews.com] - about half way down the page.
Move to the Netherlands (Score:2)
They get to smoke pot on the streets to celebrate the Queen's birthday.
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:3, Insightful)
Hrm... I've heard that in Japan, that public shaming is usually followed by ritual suicide.
Perhaps we should encourage the practice
recitivism? (Score:2)
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2)
Its just more publicity. Are they going to read the ad as well? File this in the bonehead category. Furthermore, as a republican run organization they need to do the republican thing. Money.
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2)
replacing the adds on a website your using or adding extra popups would immediately spring to mind as possibilities.
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2, Funny)
Now... Where did I put that comfy chair!
Re:Wet bus ticket (Score:2)
1)Write scathing reviews of products
2)Send a message to the manufacturers of said products telling them that if they send you money you will continue to write similar reviews which help bolster brand recognition among your readerbase.
3)Sit back and try to figure out how to make money off these cease & decist letters the companies send you.
whoa (Score:5, Funny)
Re:whoa (Score:2)
Nothing to see here, move along.
Not entirely. (Score:5, Interesting)
(Name-and-shame suffers from two big problems. First, there's no actual requirement for there to be any evidence of Adware. The FCC doesn't have to prove a case to anyone, it only has to write down a name. Second, if a name is put down that shouldn't be there, redress will be next to impossible. The media outlets can claim - justifiably - that they're not responsible for official statements from Government. I know of nobody who has sued the Federal Government in civil court for slander or libel, and they've probably got immunity to such suits anyway.)
Actually, there is a better method and the Supreme Court provided it. The Government is allowed to seize private land for the purpose of boosting the economy in a region, under a recent interpretation of Eminent Domain. Adware companies damage the Internet economy. It would seem to follow that the Government can seize those companies and sell them to other, less malign, individuals. (It's less messy than the hung-drawn-and-quartered method someone else proposed, too.)
Re:Not entirely. (Score:2)
Re:Not entirely. (Score:2)
Well... (Score:2)
The second problem is that the US "owns" US technology, whether it is on US soil or not. That's how they get to have so much control over who can buy what from whom. Chances are, most servers are using software from the US running on hard
There's a sane Government? (Score:2)
I'm also of the opinion that that sort of change is extraordinar
Re:There's a sane Government? (Score:2)
Are you serious? Last time I checked public lynchings were definatly on the decline. Though I do agree that technical ability to communicate has drastically decreased common manors in communications have gone down drastically. Is there as way out of the semingly inverse relationship to social grace and technology? I doupt it.
Re:whoa (Score:2)
Does the phrase: "No publicity is bad publicity" ...mean anything to you?
Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:4, Insightful)
Spyware: YES
Then again... there may be some problems related to what is considered spyware and what's not. For example, is a piece of software that "phones home" for ANY reason considered spyware?
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:2)
Probably not. Part of the definition of "spy" is secrecy.
Thus, if I identify myself to you and ask you some questions, nobody would accuse me of spying. To spy on someone generally means that they don't know about what you're doing.
The term "spyware" implies more than that it's software. This term implies secretly collecting information.
So if a software installer asks your permission to register you, this really wouldn't qualify as anything w
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:5, Insightful)
If it is without the knowledge of the user, then yes, that is pretty much the definition of spyware.
If a program pops a dialog up and says, it wants to know if its ok to send DoubleClick all my history urls and cookies and then I click yes and it phones home... Then well... I'm just dumb, but thats not spyware.
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:2)
-nB
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:2)
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:4, Insightful)
Is this an oblique reference to the latest version of ITunes ? (or the Firfox+GoogleToolbar combo which phones home upon sucessful installation?)
Re:Wonderful idea, but could get sticky... (Score:2)
Free advertising? (Score:4, Interesting)
Thereby granting said company immense public exposure and advertising...
Re:Free advertising? (Score:2)
Which will hopefully cause hacker groups to install adware on THOSE companies' computers.
Re:Free advertising? (Score:2, Insightful)
Sounds like free advertising. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sounds like free advertising. (Score:5, Funny)
No such thing as bad publicity.
I don't know about that. How is SCO doing these days with all that free advertising we gave them?
Re:Sounds like free advertising. (Score:2)
Re:Sounds like free advertising. (Score:2)
I ask her, "are those really your initials?"
She says, "yes, why?"
At which point, I explain to her who SCO is.
Odd experience.
Re:Sounds like free advertising. (Score:2)
Anyone find it ironic... (Score:2)
Honestly.... (Score:1)
Re:Honestly.... (Score:2)
I think you mean your FORMER clients.
- Your former client
Re:Honestly.... (Score:2)
And not until.
Finally, someone to stop these shameless people (Score:5, Funny)
By... ummm... shaming them... umm... wait.. I think I see a possible flaw in this plan.
It's also... (Score:2)
This is not a useful method of solving adware - or anything that depends on publicity to thrive. I'm not sure what remedy would work, but you're never going to feed Adware to death.
Re:Finally, someone to stop these shameless people (Score:3, Insightful)
It's true that even bad publicity can be good, but don't underestimate the power of information.
That's a start.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:That's a start.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the technical term for that is "money machine"
a.k.a. "magic money machine"
Re:That's a start.. (Score:2)
True, but at least lavasoft (adaware) is the #1 search result
I searched for "spyware remover".
Re:That's a start.. (Score:2)
Re:That's a start.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's a start.. (Score:2)
Re:That's a start.. (Score:2)
They should hire John Cleese for the ad campaign (Score:4, Funny)
Re:They should hire John Cleese for the ad campaig (Score:2)
Forget the advertisers (Score:4, Interesting)
Not the coders' faults. (Score:2)
Re:Not the coders' faults. (Score:3, Insightful)
Deeper Issues (Score:5, Insightful)
This isn't just an issue for spamvertisers. Delegating fundamental business processes (e.g., customer billing) to third parties seems to be a popular with all sorts of companies as a means of obfuscating procedures and dodging responsibility for mistakes. I call bullshit on all of it!
Re:Deeper Issues (Score:2)
Well, yes and no. If you look into the issue of online billing, you'll find that it's quite baffling to anyone but a computer geek. You can't exchange currency via a web site. Checks aren't much better; they mostly lead to prospective customers moving on to another sit
Is that all? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is that all? (Score:3, Funny)
Cheers. So who's first?
Re:Is that all? (Score:2)
Re:Is that all? (Score:2)
actually a clever idea! (Score:2)
Brilliant! Brilliant! <clink>
Hint, Hint, Hint (Score:1)
Worried about being investigated?
Can't face the shame?
We can help.
This is an out... (Score:1)
Just seeing that headline made me cringe. I've gotten the run around so many times by company's because they said "No, it's not our problem. We contract that out to a firm to do that."
Yeah, yeah, I KNOW that they're (the original companies)responsible, but trying to get around the clerks and middle mgt. I usually have to make some sort of complaint to some regulator. They just then say "Fix it." to the company that wouldn't take responsibility.
What I'm trying to say is, t
Good for them (Score:2)
I think this is a very good idea (Score:5, Interesting)
When the public fears the government, you have tyranny.
Perhaps a weak analogy, but if companies started seriously fearing public opinion - as opposed to say Sony BMG[1] - that would certainly be a good thing.
Fear of the public will stimulate healthy competition (and not under the table/behind closed doors competition).
[1]
Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?
--SonyBMG manager Thomas Hesse
Re:I think this is a very good idea (Score:2)
Re:I think this is a very good idea (Score:2, Interesting)
They won't. The public has too a short of a memory.
Fear is a crappy motivator (Score:2)
Mutual respect is the obvious answer. Respect doesn't threaten and doesn't fear threats. Getting mutual respect is going to be tough - I'm not convinced any existing system is capable of it -
Um, I don't WANT to live in FEAR (Score:2, Interesting)
When the public fears the government, you have tyranny.
Sorry, I'm an American, born in America, of American parents and grandparents and my dad and grandad served in the USAF.
I don't want to live in Fear.
And right now, we sure as heck don't have democracy here.
That said, I'm not sure I trust the Bush Regime to use this to go after real spyware firms - they're just as likely to use it as yet another excuse to spy on American citizens' private data stor
I'm fur it (Score:1)
I'd suggest $10 million per instance, such as per each single title cd release because anything less will be be treated as a cost of doing business to these low life jerks. Maybe thats not enough, but done often enough it will send a messa
Re:I'm fur it (Score:2)
I'm sure we can, but I don't think that's enough. What I'd like to see is a law making it a federal crime (Interstate Commerce, here, so it's federal.) to provide (properly defined) spyware, or knowingly host a site that tries to download it onto viewer's machines. The penalty would be prison, with
Re:I'm fur it (Score:2)
Maybe, but then they'd just have a designated, probably gay fall guy & pay his family if he has one, $60k a year while he sits in the slammer getting pounded (or doing the pounding, probably both). While they continue business as usual.
I very much prefer to hit them in the language that an MBA can understand because it takes ALL the profit out of it and then some. A minimum of 3x what they may have made, with a $1
Which spyware apps? (Score:1)
Re:Which spyware apps? (Score:2)
What difference? (Score:2, Informative)
I find it easier trying to stay out of the adware itself
We, as 'smart' users need to Class-Action (Score:3, Interesting)
Why do the makers of worms/viruses get huge criminal punishments and the companies that make money off of adware get 'embarassment'?
If these were reputable companies in the first place, the old adage of "All publicity is good publicity" would not apply. We, as 'smart' users, owe it to the rest of the computing community to do our research, find out who is involved, and sue them until they bleed red.
Hell.. we could get a Wiki going of spyware (if there already isn't one), and which companies are involved, what addresses, countries, etc.. And then start hiring some lawyers to make lots of money off of our suffering..
I don't wanna be the one to start it, though. Fucking fuck. This porno site just popped up and Internet Explorer crashed. I gotta go.
From TFA... (Score:3)
And I'm supposed to care about this... because?
I don't care if knows that the company they have hired to spamvertise are spammers or not. I think should be punished for allowing their product to be allowed for spam. Just as I don't care if a mortgage broker knows that his leads came from blast faxes or spam - I am all for honeypots that lead to hefty fines against brokers who purchase spam-solicited ads. (Or, better yet, a law requiring any mortgage broker who responds to actually give me that 30 year, 0 down $300,000 loan for $500/month)
Wow (Score:1)
How about aiding and abetting? (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Spyware/Adware is essentially unauthorized use of a computer system. I'm pretty sure this is well-defined as a criminal act. (the electronic equivalent of breaking and entering)
2. Paying Adware companies to partake in their venture via advertisement = aiding & abetting, or conspiring to commit illegal acts, or whatever you want to call it.
This "public shaming" by the FTC is laughable. They'd have been better off doing NOTHING than doing something that all but concedes that they have no power (or at least no political will) to actually stop these acts that they obviously disapprove of.
Re:How about aiding and abetting? (Score:2)
Antispyware activism (Score:5, Interesting)
Perfect! (Score:2, Redundant)
Best way to attack spyware adware companies (Score:2, Interesting)
Nothing else will change their behavior.
Sounds all warm and fuzzy... (Score:2)
BTM
i hate spammers (Score:2, Interesting)
i run a small website, this website has a few user comment areas. the comments are in plain text only. if you enter html, it gets stripped. urls are not converted into links.
people have been automatically spamming the site with links to phentermine and god knows what else, so I implemented a CAPTCHA solution that I wrote in PHP. they now spam me with broken html to bypass the captcha*. never, ever
Blacklist of Internet Advertisers (Score:2)
fines? jail? (Score:2, Interesting)
Ob Holy Grail Quote (Score:3, Funny)
Liberace put it best... (Score:2)
Standard form of reply applies here (Score:2, Interesting)
Your post advocates a
( ) technical (x) legislative ( ) market-based ( ) vigilante
approach to fighting spam. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)
( ) Spammers can easily use it to harvest email addresses
( ) Mailing lists and other legitimate email uses would be affected
(x) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the mone
Would the World Bank be listed too? (Score:2)
Or is that not not considered spyware?
The lengths some people go to..... (Score:2, Offtopic)
2 cents,
Queen B
Re:The lengths some people go to..... (Score:2)
2 more cents,
Queen B
And just how does one shame adware advertisers? (Score:2)
About fuckin' time... (Score:2)
But attack the 'penis pill pushers' who hire these spammers, ridicule will do for a start, and they'll stop wasting their money on spammers.
That will nip the problem in the bud...
Joe jobs (Score:2)
Re:Joe jobs (Score:2)
You haven't got karma for funny mods for quite a while now...
Re:Joe jobs (Score:2)
You haven't got karma for funny mods for quite a while now...
Read my journal.
You forget two points (Score:3, Insightful)
b) They don't get their PRODUCTS advertised, either. Just their name in a blacklist.
Sincerely, we've all heard about spyware companies suing antivirus for blacklisting them. Can they sue the FTC, now?