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by Dave Gradijan

Google Issues Alerts for Dangerous Sites

News
Aug 07, 20062 mins
CSO and CISOData and Information Security

Google has begun alerting users whenever they click on a search result that may take them to a dangerous website.

The new feature, which was spotted early last week, went live officially Friday, according to an announcement from The Stop Badware Coalition, which is collaborating with Google on this effort.

When users attempt to click over to a website considered to be potentially dangerous, Google shows users an alert page that informs them of the possible risk and gives them the option to click back to the results page or continue on to the questionable website.

The flagged websites have been reported as dangerous to The Stop Badware Coalition. Google will progressively replace the generic alert page with pages containing specific reports about the websites. The Stop Badware Coalition will provide these individual reports as well.

The Stop Badware Coalition is a nonprofit organization led by Harvard University and the University of Oxford and backed by Google, Lenovo Group and Sun Microsystems.

This new Google feature attempts to address a real problem: Search engines routinely display links to websites that download spyware and adware to visitors’ PCs, exploit security vulnerabilities and attempt to scam users and include them in spam lists.

In the United States, people land on malicious websites about 285 million times per month by clicking on search results from the five major search engines, according to a recent study conducted by McAfee’s SiteAdvisor unit.

Google didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

By Juan Carlos Perez, IDG News Service (Miami Bureau)

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