Messenger Service

K

Kristian

Anyone out there having the same popups as me when they
are online? Says they are from Messenger Service... Seem
to be ads for websites mainly...

Anyone know a way of getting rid of them?
Cheers
Kristian.
 
P

purplehaz

Secure your hacker prone computer:

If they say messenger service in the title bar, these popups have nothing to
do with MSN messenger or Windows messenger. What this is a new way for
spammers to attack your computer and send you pop-up ads. If you receive
these ads it means that your computers netbios ports are wide open to the
internet and this could be a real security problem. What you should do is
install a good firewall that will block the ports the spammers use and stop
the ads. A good place to start is Zone Alarm ( www.zonelabs.com ) for an
inbound/outbound blocking firewall or use the inbound blocking only firewall
built in to XP. If needed configure the XP firewall to block ports 135,
137-139 and 445. Zone Alarm will block these ports by default.

Use this site to test some of your ports security:
https://grc.com/x/ne.dll?bh0bkyd2

You can disable the messenger service, which is the service the spammers
exploit, but it isn't needed to stop the ads and disabling the service will
not secure your computer from outside attacks or block the open netbios
ports.

Note: If the Messenger service is stopped, messages from the Alerter
service (notifications from your antivirus software, for example) are
not transmitted. If the Messenger service is turned off, any services
that explicitly depend on the Messenger service do not start, and an
error message is logged in the System event log. For this reason,
Microsoft recommends that you install a firewall and configure it to
block NetBIOS and RPC traffic instead of turning off the Messenger
service.

If the pop-ups appear while surfing web pages then download and install one
of the many pop-up blocker programs. Search www.download.com for popup
blocker, you'll find many free ones.

Also get a good spyware cleaner -- http://security.kolla.de/
 
C

Carol

-----Original Message-----
Anyone out there having the same popups as me when they
are online? Says they are from Messenger Service... Seem
to be ads for websites mainly...

Anyone know a way of getting rid of them?
Cheers
Kristian.
.
Did this tonight, works great. Go on to search Google,
and search for Disable Windows Messenger, and follow the
advice.
 
P

Perdita X. Dream

Kristian said:
Anyone out there having the same popups as me when they
are online?

Had you bothered to search the group before posting, you'd have found the
answer to that and a solution to your problem. Please see link one in my
signature for answers to this, and all other, FAQs.

Says they are from Messenger Service... Seem
to be ads for websites mainly...

Anyone know a way of getting rid of them?

You'd have found this out too had you bothered to spend five minutes
looking..As you don't appear to be capable, I suppose I'll have to do it for
you...

Does the title bar of these pop-ups read "Messenger Service?"

This particular "sales method" is strikingly similar to the
"protection" rackets offered to small businesses by organized
criminals. Yes, it's a scam; no reputable business would need to
resort to extortion. Particularly since they're trying to sell you a
type of protection that is already available to you free of charge.

This type of spam has become quite common over the past few
months, and unintentionally serves as a valid security "alert." It
demonstrates that you haven't been taking sufficient precautions while
connected to the Internet. Your data probably hasn't been compromised
by these specific advertisements, but if you're open to this exploit,
you may well be open to other threats. Install and use a decent,
properly configured firewall. (Disabling the messenger service, as
some people recommend, only hides the symptom, and does nothing to
secure your machine.) And ignoring or just "putting up with" these
messages and the problem they represent is particularly foolish.

Messenger Service of Windows
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=KB;en-us;168893

Messenger Service Window That Contains an Internet Advertisement
Appears
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=330904

Stopping Advertisements with Messenger Service Titles
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/using/howto/communicate/stopspam.asp

Blocking Ads, Parasites, and Hijackers with a Hosts File
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm

Oh, and be especially wary of people who advise you to do nothing
more than disable the messenger service. Disabling the messenger
service is a "head in the sand" approach to computer security.

The real problem is not the messenger service pop-ups; they're
actually providing a useful service by acting as a security alert. The
true problem is the unsecured computer, and you've been
advised to merely turn off the warnings. How is this helpful?

Equivalent Scenario 1: Somewhere in a house, a small fire starts,
and sets off the smoke alarm. You, not immediately seeing any
fire/smoke, complain about the noise of the smoke detector, and are
advised to remove the smoke detector's battery and go back to sleep.

Equivalent Scenario 2: You over-exert your shoulder at work or
play, causing bursitis. After weeks of annoying and sometimes
excruciating pain whenever you try to reach over your head, you go to
a doctor and say, while demonstrating the motion, "Doc, it hurts when
I do this." The doctor, being as helpful as some of your respondents,
replies, "Well, don't do that."

I'm beginning to think that the people deliberately posting such
bad advice are hacker-wannabes who have no true interest in helping
you secure your system, but would rather give you a false sense of
security while ensuring that your computer is still open to
exploitation.
 
J

Joh N.

Peptic X. Ulcerous, while picking dingleberries from her ass, ineptly blathered
:
Had you bothered to search the group before posting, you'd have found the
answer to that and a solution to your problem. Please see link one in my
signature for answers to this, and all other, FAQs.

No one *has* to "bother" doing shit in here but ask questions, you walking
stink-hole. You're so whiny and stupid, you just *had* to get in some kind of
degrading remarks before plagiarizing...and you suck up to whats-his-name who
made the actual 'help' so much as to be sickening. You only plagiarize it too,
simply because you're too ****ing stupid to know the answer yourself.
Says they are from Messenger Service... Seem

You'd have found this out too had you bothered to spend five minutes
looking..As you don't appear to be capable, I suppose I'll have to do it for
you...

As you don't appear capable of giving any advice or help that's not already
been given by someone else, I suppose you'll just have to go jump in front of a
truck on the autobahn, and put yourself out of our misery.

<snip plagiarized crap>

Joh N.
 
P

Perdita X. Dream

Carol said:
and search for Disable Windows Messenger, and follow the
advice.

As they have nothing whatsoever to do with Windows Messenger, this would be
futile. If you're referring to disabling the Messenger Service that is an
incredibly foolish thing to do (please see my response to learn why).
 
R

rifleman

Had you bothered to search the group before posting, you'd have found the
answer to that and a solution to your problem. Please see link one in my
signature for answers to this, and all other, FAQs.

The OP is using the horrible web access. have you ever TRIED searching
with that? It's almost impossible. better advice would have been to
recommend the OP uses a proper newsreader!
 

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