6.6.07

Music, tech searches greatest risk - Australian IT - June 5 2007

Anick Jesdanun in New York June 05, 2007


SEARCH terms related to music and technology are most likely to return sites with spyware and other malicious code, a new study finds.Some 42 per cent of the results using the term "screensavers," for example, led to sites flagged with a "red" warning or a cautionary "yellow" by McAfee's SiteAdvisor service. Other keywords McAfee deemed risky include names of file-sharing software - "BearShare," "LimeWire" and "Kazaa."

In many cases, the programs come bundled with adware and toolbars McAfee considers unwanted, according to McAfee's "The State of Search Engine Safety" report.

Nevertheless, McAfee found it had become slightly safer to use search engines. Although about 4 per cent of search results lead to sites deemed risky, the result was down from the 5 per cent recorded a year ago.

"We've seen some incremental steps in the right direction," senior product manager for SiteAdvisor Mark Maxwell said. "But the average Joe user should be aware there's still plenty to be concerned about."

Risks are greater when clicking on keyword ads that make up much of search companies' revenue. According to McAfee, 7 per cent of such links produce risky sites, down from 8.5 per cent a year ago.

SiteAdvisor rates sites based on whether they result in spyware, viruses, excessive pop-up ads, junk email or other threats. The study was conducted by running about 2,300 popular keywords through the top five search engines - Google, Yahoo, MSN, AOL and Ask.

Search companies have taken steps to mitigate the risks. Google, for instance, sometimes flags links to sites it deems risky, and McAfee found a notable drop in risk when using Google, AOL and Ask. Ask and AOL get search ads from Google, and AOL uses Google to power regular search results as well.

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