As social networking tools change the way we communicate, spammers have begun turning their attention to services such as Facebook and MySpace, tricking users into installing viruses, launching fraudulent websites and deploying malware throughout their computers and networks, accoring to a a new report by MessageLabs.
While spamming via e-mail services remains prevalent, "spammers see social networks as the new horizon," says Matt Sergeant,
senior anti-spam technologist at MessageLabs. Spammers have managed to set up phony social networking accounts, according to MessageLabs, by breaking the protections
set in place by a safeguard known as CAPTCHA (Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart),
the letters you normally have to type in when you register for a website that says "Are you a human?"
Luckily, if you're wading in the social networking pool, you can revisit some core security principles in order to protect yourself from spammers and other characters on Facebook who can ruin your computer or identity, Sergeant says.
News 3 years ago

