Welcome | Sign In
TechNewsWorld.com
Malware

Universities Crack Down on Alleged Spyware Program

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Universities Crack Down on Alleged Spyware Program

According to ComScore Senior Vice President Dan Hess, Marketscore isn't spyware and users who choose to install it on their computers do so with open eyes. "When software evaluators looked at our very complete disclosures at the Marketscore site, they determined that, in fact, this is not a spyware application," he said.


Universities have begun thwarting the operation of software that promises to accelerate Internet performance and protect its users from malware infections because they feel the program is actually spyware.

A number of schools, including Columbia University, Cornell, Indiana State and Penn State, have advised their students to avoid using, or have blocked access to addresses used by, a program called Marketscore, a product deployed by ComScore Networks, a consumer marketing firm in Reston, Virginia.

In a warning posted online on October 13, Columbia notified students that its IT department had "started blocking Internet traffic to and from a set of Internet addresses belonging to marketscore.com. These addresses were being used to hijack browsers to display ads and possibly perform other actions."

Not-So-Secure Socket

"[A] number of systems on campus running Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows have been infected with spyware distributed by a company called MarketScore," Cornell IT Security warned its students on October 12. "This malicious software directs all your Web traffic through the marketing Download Free eBook - The Edge of Success: 9 Building Blocks to Double Your Sales company's servers, allowing them to potentially view any information you send or receive through your Web browser. This includes any data that would normally be protected during an HTTPS session using SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) encryption."

According to ComScore Senior Vice President Dan Hess, however, Marketscore isn't spyware and users who choose to install it on their computers do so with open eyes.

"When software evaluators looked at our very complete disclosures at the Marketscore site, they determined that, in fact, this is not a spyware application," he told TechNewsWorld.

Change in Behavior

Security experts have mixed views on the offering.

"We used to characterize Marketscore as spyware," observed Sam Curry, vice president for product management of eTrust Security Management at Computer Associates International in Islandia, New York. "We no longer do."

Curry explained that from January to June of this year, the program, under its former name, Netsetter, was classified as spyware. "But they changed their behavior," he said. "However, we have recently received some more complaints, so we will be reexamining them in the weeks to come to determine if they are spyware or not."

The complaints, he noted, center on Marketscore claims that it will enhance Internet performance.

"People have so many different kinds of Internet connections today that I don't know how they could speed up all the different variations out there," said Richard M. Smith, a software consultant in Boston.

Security Risk

The perception of the performance enhancements claimed by Marketscore can vary, conceded ComScore's Hess. "It works with all connections," he said, "but the perception of improvement will vary with connection type."

"If you're on a broadband connection, because you're already on a very fast line, the perceived improvement may not be as great," he explained.

Whether Marketscore is spyware or not, it does pose a security risk to its users, maintained eTrust's Curry.

"If you and I were to have an encrypted conversation," he told a reporter, "then I can be reasonably assured that anything I deliver is only openable by you."

"What this does," he continued, "is inserts a point into the process where your traffic is decrypted by this company then re-encrypted and sent to the person you want to have your conversation with."

Dangerous Proposition

That can be a hairy proposition, especially when the person you're conversing with is your bank, a credit card company, an online brokerage or a health care provider. "Can you trust Marketscore's employees?" Curry asked rhetorically. "Can you trust everyone that has access to their networks? Can you trust the people who come in and do the services there?"

"You have to trust Marketscore to have their physical security right and to have their networks secure because they're a very attractive target to capture hundreds of pieces of personal information about a person in one place," he said.

"That's a single point of failure and that's a very dangerous thing from a security perspective," he contended.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by John P. Mello Jr.


Related News Alerts

Microsoft Activate Alert | Search Archives

More by John P. Mello Jr.

Tune-Up App Lets You Get More Intimate With Your Mac
February 08, 2010
Getting under the hood and really digging around with OS X's deepest settings can often be a little tricky, but Macware's MacTuneUp is designed to put those controls within arm's reach. Its latest version makes it more compatible with Snow Leopard, and it's ready to take on tasks like disc clean-up, boot disc creation, and Internet connection optimization.
TopXNotes: A Concierge for the Constant Scrivener
February 01, 2010
For serious note-takers, creating the notes themselves is the easy part -- the hard part is organizing it all. Tropical Software's TopXNotes, now in version 1.5, can organize, categorize, sort, sequence and sync as many missives as you can throw at it. TopXNotes also features an encryption utility and an enhanced drag-and-drop system.
3M Miniprojector Packs Lots of Versatility Into Small Package
January 25, 2010
The 3M MPro120 is a pocket-sized, lightweight projector that can cast video and images of up to 50 inches on just about any surface. Those videos and images can come from a wide range of gadgets and devices, and 3M pack in an ampe supply of connectors and adapters. Accompanying documentation is sparse, but the gizmo is easy enough to figure out without too much guesswork.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
9 Proven Techniques to Double your Sales.
Free eBook: Click here to download today.
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network