Google used to inform
its users about the secretly installed programs that can change a
browser's settings without the user's permission. Those revisions can
unleash a siege of aggravating ads or redirect the browser's users to
search engines or other sites that they didn't intend to visit. Google
had already deployed the warning system to alert users of its Chrome
browser that they were about to enter a site which distributes unwanted
software. The Mountain View, California, company has recently began to
feed these security information into a broader "safe browsing"
application that also works in Apple's Safari and Mozilla's Firefox
browsers.
The safe browsing application had become
so effective at flagging malware and phishing that are increasingly
creating unwanted software in an attempt to hoodwink people, said
Stephan Somogyi, Google's product manager of safe browsing. "The folks
trying to make a buck off people have to come up with new stuff and that
puts us in a position where we have to innovate to keep pace with these
guys," Somogyi said in an interview. "You are now going to see a
crescendo in our enforcement on sites that meet our standard of having
unwanted software."
Whenever a potential threat is detected
by the safe browsing system, it displays a red warning sign advising a
user to stay away.
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