News19,135 Articles

July 2, 2009

Click fraud Trojan cheats Google Adsense

Malware funnels searches through its own site

Jeremy Kirk

A new piece of malicious software has been discovered that cheats Google and potentially other search engines out of money.

The Trojan horse perpetuates click fraud, a scam in which web advertisements are clicked in excess or under misleading circumstances in order to generate revenue for those who own the web pages the ads appear on.

The malware, called 'FFSearcher', is "one of the more clever" ones seen of late, wrote Joe Stewart, director of malware analysis at SecureWorks, on a company blog.

The Trojan that SecureWorks analysed revolves around the use of a widget made available to webmasters from Google. Google offers a custom search box that can be embedded in websites, which enables access to its search engine and also shows AdSense advertisements.

If someone clicks on an AdSense ad, Google will pay the website operator "a small sum of money", Stewart wrote.

For PCs that have been infected with FFSearcher, all searches the person does on Google are invisibly channeled through another website called My Web Way, which uses Google's search widget. The user sees search results that appear to come from Google but actually are first channelled through My Web Way. Even the URL box indicates the results come through Google's domain, Stewart wrote.

What the creators of FFSearcher are hoping is that those infected users will also click on AdSense ads, which My Web Way will get credit for. Google loses since it pays those fees. My Web Way appeared to be no longer active as of Wednesday afternoon.

A Google spokesman said the company has taken steps to disable the AdSense for search accounts affiliated with the Trojan. Advertisers were not directly hurt, the spokesman said.

FFSearcher works with the Firefox and Internet Explorer browsers. An analysis of the code showed that Yahoo also appeared to be a target, Stewart wrote.

The problem with FFSearcher is that it may be difficult for search engine companies to detect the fraud since the behaviour of users is no different than normal, Stewart wrote. Google and other companies use technology that can, for example, detect when an automated program or bot is repeatedly clicking on an ad in a behaviour inconsistent with the way a human would interact.

"FFSearcher undoubtedly raises the bar for the fraud detection teams working at the major search engines," Stewart wrote. "It will be interesting to see how they combat it and other trojans using the same techniqu e in the future."

See more PC security news

Free whitepaper: Phishing for victims - Truth, myth and cybercrime

<<newer story | back to index | older story>>

What is this?

Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift

Keep up to date by adding PC Advisor News to your iGoogle home page or Google Reader


Question of the day!

Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?

Question of the day!

Does your smartphone replace your need for a laptop when on the move?

% of PC Advisor readers agree with you

Yes
TBC
No
TBC

What tasks can your smartphone do that would have traditionally been done on a laptop?

119 characters remaining

Follow the conversation at @SmartphoneFocus

web browsing, search facilities, voip, email, word processing everything RT @Graham_D_C

Mainly email but getting better at spreadsheets etc, RT @IDGdan

Google


Recent reviews

Reviews index


Latest reader comments

Latest reader comments


Top news

News index


Latest blog entries

Blogs index


 Our RSS feeds

Sponsored Content

  • Take the internet to new places with the Nokia N800
    Communicate how you want to, where you want to with instant messaging, email and internet calling. View movies, browse the internet wirelessly and watch TV on the high-resolution screen and listen through high-quality stereo speakers with headphone jack.
    Buy now