porno ad!!! Help please!

F

Fabrizio

Hi folks!

I have a quite serious problem; whatever I do with my computer porno ads pop
up countinuously making my life impossible!! I scanned the computer with Ad
aware (latest verison), spybot-search and destroy (laest version), I purged
all the temporary internet files, cookes, and temp directories, I scan the
computer with Norton Antivirus 2004, in brief the computer should be clean
but still porno pop ups are there appearing whenever they want to.

How do I work this out? I really do not know what to do anymore!!!

Thanks!!!
 
F

Fabrizio

I may try to run 'HiJack This' but do you really think that 'HiJack This' is
better or would do a better job than Ad aware, spybot, and norton antivirus
all together? I truly doubt!! In addition, as you may know 'HiJack This'
just gives a lot of entiers even in a clean system and decide what to delete
isn't a easy task!

Any other suggestions?

Fab
 
A

Alan Illeman

Fabrizio said:
Hi folks!

I have a quite serious problem; whatever I do with my computer porno ads pop
up countinuously making my life impossible!! I scanned the computer with Ad
aware (latest verison), spybot-search and destroy (laest version), I purged
all the temporary internet files, cookes, and temp directories, I scan the
computer with Norton Antivirus 2004, in brief the computer should be clean
but still porno pop ups are there appearing whenever they want to.

How do I work this out? I really do not know what to do anymore!!!

Thanks!!!

I never need to purge my Temporary Internet Files, as there is never
anything there, since I'm only logged on as a (Power)User with the
minimum permissions I can get away with (Read & Execute; List
Folder Contents; Read). I also removed the group "Everyone" from
the system and replaced it with the "Authenticated Users" group.

Never get any popups, either.
 
D

Dave

What type of popups are they? Internet Explorer, Messaging System?
The latter can be countered by deactivating the Messaging Service, also
search google.groups for this as there have been a few good posts regarding
this service and firewall security in the past.

-Dave
 
N

Never anonymous Bud

Fresh from an Iraqi prisoner interrogation "Fabrizio said:
I may try to run 'HiJack This' but do you really think that 'HiJack This' is
better or would do a better job than Ad aware, spybot, and norton antivirus
all together?

Possible, and it's free so why NOT try it?

You probably have a browser hijack exploit on your system.
Anti-virus software usually doesn't catch that.
 
F

Fabrizio

Thanks to all of you!

I will keep trying.
If you come up with any other ideas please poste them.

In answer to Dave:
I get internet Explorer popups!
 
D

Danny Mingledorff

Fabrizio said:
Hi folks!

I have a quite serious problem; whatever I do with my computer porno ads pop
up countinuously making my life impossible!! I scanned the computer with Ad
aware (latest verison), spybot-search and destroy (laest version), I purged
all the temporary internet files, cookes, and temp directories, I scan the
computer with Norton Antivirus 2004, in brief the computer should be clean
but still porno pop ups are there appearing whenever they want to.

How do I work this out? I really do not know what to do anymore!!!

Thanks!!!

You should also consider adding a firewall to the mix.

....danny
 
J

Jim Byrd

Hi Fabrizio - Do you get popups even when your browser is not connected to
the Internet with a title bar reading "Messenger Service"?

--
Please respond in the same thread.
Regards, Jim Byrd, MS-MVP



In
 
B

Bruce Chambers

Greetings --

There are at least three varieties of pop-ups, and the solutions
vary accordingly. Which specific type(s) is troubling you?

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

This type of spam has become quite common over the past several
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, such as the Blaster Worm that
recently swept cross the Internet. Install and use a decent,
properly configured firewall. (Merely disabling the messenger
service, as some people recommend, only hides the symptom, and does
little or nothing to truly secure your machine.) And ignoring or just
"putting up with" the security gap represented by these messages 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, by itself, 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, if annoying, 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?

2) For regular Internet pop-ups, you might try the free 12Ghosts
Popup-killer from http://12ghosts.com/ghosts/popup.htm, Pop-Up Stopper
from http://www.panicware.com/, or the Google Toolbar from
http://toolbar.google.com/, which is what I use.

3) To deal with pop-ups caused by any sort of "adware" and/or
"spyware,"such as Gator, Comet Cursors, Xupiter, Bonzai Buddy, or
KaZaA, and their remnants, that you've deliberately (but without
understanding the consequences) installed, two products that are
quite effective (at finding and removing this type of scumware) are
Ad-Aware from www.lavasoft.de and SpyBot Search & Destroy from
www.safer-networking.org/. Both have free versions. It's even
possible to use SpyBot Search & Destroy to "immunize" your system
against most future intrusions. I use both and generally perform
manual scans every week or so to clean out cookies, etc.

When visiting porn sites, always be careful not to
download/install their "free" viewers. You'll get more than expected,
every time. To repair the current situation, uninstall the
"viewer(s)" provided and then, as mentioned above, use Ad-Aware from
www.lavasoft.de and SpyBot Search and Destroy from
www.safer-networking.org/ to clean up any residue.



Bruce Chambers
--
Help us help you:



You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on
having both at once. - RAH
 
D

Dave

To follow up on what everyone else suggested.
Have a look in the following folder for Internet Explorer plugins that you
may have installed.

C:\WINNT\Downloaded Program Files

You'll find all the common extras such as "Update Class", "QuickTime
Object", "Shockwave Flash Object" etc. etc.
Right click -->properties to find out where it came. Anything suspicious?
Now I may be wrong here but I usually just manually delete anything I dont
want, there may of course be a better(cleaner) way of uninstalling these
files.

hth,
Dave
 
F

Fabrizio

Thanks Jim, Dave and Danny for posting.
I do not remeber whether the title bar of these pop-ups contains "Messenger
Service", I will take a look at it. However, I get popups even when
disconnected from the internet and page/s does/do not load after attempting
to connect.

I will try your suggestions and will let you know what's happened.

Keep you posted!!

Thanks!!

Fabrizio
 
J

Jim Byrd

Hi Fabrizio - There are currently two classes of things going on that are
causing people popup difficulties. If you get popups even when your browser
is not connected to the Internet with a title bar reading "Messenger
Service", then these are most likely due to open NetBios TCP ports 135, 139
and 445 and UDP ports 135, 137-138 and a UDP port in the range of
1026-1029.. You really need to block these with a firewall as a general
protection measure. You can stop the popups by turning off Messenger
Service; however, this still leaves you vulnerable. If you have an NT-based
OS such as XP or Win2k, you should probably also specifically block TCP
593, 4444 and UDP 69, 139, 445, and install the very important 824146 patch
from MS03-039, here: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=824146
to block the Blaster worm as well as several other parasites.


See: Messenger Service Window That Contains an Internet Advertisement
Appears http://support.microsoft.com/?id=330904 which identifies reasons to
keep this service and steps to take if you do.

You can test your system and follow the 'Prevention' link to get additional
information here:
http://www.mynetwatchman.com/winpopuptester.asp Unless you have very good
reasons to keep this active, it should be turned off in Win2k and XP. Go
here and do what it says:
http://www.itc.virginia.edu/desktop/docs/messagepopup/ or, even better, get
MessageSubtract, free, here, which will give you flexible control of the
service and viewing of these messages:
http://www.intermute.com/messagesubtract/help.html Recommended.

(FWIW, ZoneAlarm's default Internet Zone firewall configuration blocks the
necessary ports to prevent this use of Messenger Service. I don't know the
situation with regard to other firewalls.)

Messenger Service is not per se Spyware or something that MS did wrong - It
provides a messaging capability which is useful for local intranets and is
also sometimes (albeit nowdays infrequently) used by some applications to
provide popup messages to users. However, it can also be (and now frequently
is) used to introduce spam via this open NetBios channel. For a single user
home computer, it normally isn't needed and can be turned off which will
eliminate the spam popups. This DOESN'T, however, remove the vulnerability
of having these ports open, when in fact they aren't needed, since they can
be perverted in other ways as well, some of which can be much more damaging
than just a spam popup.



If you're getting a lot of popups while surfing, then the following may be
useful:

Popups - The best way to start is to get Ad-Aware 6.0, Build 181 or later,
here: http://www.lavasoftusa.com/support/download/. Update and run this
regularly to get rid of most "spyware/hijackware" on your machine. If it
has to fix things, be sure to re-boot and rerun AdAware again and repeat
this cycle until you get a clean scan. The reason is that it may have to
remove things which are currently "in use" before it can then clean up
others.

Another excellent program for this purpose is SpyBot Search and Destroy
available here: http://security.kolla.de/ SpyBot Support Forum here:
http://www.net-integration.net/cgi-bin/forums/ikonboard.cgi. I recommend
using both normally. Update before starting, then after fixing things with
SpyBot S&D, be sure to re-boot and rerun SpyBot again and repeat this cycle
until you get a clean "no red" scan. The reason is that SpyBot sometimes
has to remove things which are currently "in use" before it can then clean
up others.

Then, there are a variety of third party "Popup Killers" available. I
normally use AdShield, which, if you maintain its Block List every now and
then, almost totally stops this. In addition, it stops a variety of
ads/banners/etc. (particularly spyware like doubleclick) on pages I access.
This is probably all you'll need; however, I've also investigated a program
called webwasher which appears to be very good, but decided that AdShield
was sufficient. At the bottom of this post, you'll find a list provided
courtesy of bc_acadia of a number of free popup blockers with links.

****** NOTE: As of 28 Apr 03 AdShield appears to have partnered with a new
reseller, and AdShield is no longer free. There is a trial version of
AdShield3; however, IMO it is seriously crippled in not being able to import
or export block lists and I think for reasonable utility one would have to
go to the full version. While I don't normally recommend non-free software,
I personally will continue to use AdShield3, since I think it is the best
currently available combined Popup/Ad/Malware blocker, but you should be
aware of the fact that it now costs, ($29.95), whereas the earlier versions
upon which I based my original recommendation were free, although not nearly
as capable as the AdShield3 release. I've included below links to both the
older free version and the new paid version. You'll have to investigate and
make your own choice in the matter. *******

Here are a number of AdShield-related links:

http://www.fsd1.org/technology/Files/AdShield.exe - AdShield1.2 (free)
http://www.internettechs.net/utilities/AdShield.exe - AdShield1.2 (free)
http://ftp.ural.ru/home/index/windows/networking/utils/AdShield -
AdShield1.2 (free)
http://www.megalog.ru/info/utilz/AdShield.zip - AdShield1.2 (free)
http://www.allstarss.com/store/adshield.html - AdShield3
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/block.txt - (Mike Burgess' .txt Block List
for AdShield)
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/block.zip - Mike Burgess' Zipped Block List
for AdShield - Recommended)
http://adshield.briankass.com/blocklists.html (lists a number of blocklists)
http://adshield.briankass.com/blocklist.abl (brian's blocklist in .abl
format)
http://adshield.briankass.com/blocklist.txt (brian's blocklist in .txt
format)
http://www.songwave.com/software/adshield_blocklist.txt (40,000 pornsites
blocked - *VERY* large list - use at your own risk)
http://www.chrismyden.com/temp/block.abl (chrismyden's blocklist in .abl
format)
http://www.staff.uiuc.edu/~ehowes/resource.htm#AdShield (Eric Howes AGNIS
for AdShield block list - Recommended) (BTW, Eric's site contains a wealth
of very valuable information about all aspects of net security - Very Highly
Recommended)

There's also a new AdShield forum here:
http://users.boardnation.com/~adshield/index.php

Here's a good AdShield test site, courtesy of siljaline: "Make ***SURE***
you have your block scripted popups enabled
http://www.mediaboy.net/1010100-1100001-1111010/gahk/>>>> [Warning this URL
opens a multitude of Browser windows almost instantly]"

http://www.webwasher.com - Webwasher


Additionally, some people have recommended Popup Stopper and PopupBuster,
but they have also been reported or experienced to cause perceived problems
for some people with "normal" links in IE6 such as Google search results and
links from OE. Some proponents of PopupBuster assert, however, that this is
normal operation for this program under
certain circumstances which can be overridden if necessary. YMMV Another
"Proxy" type blocker similar to Webwasher and Proxomitron but supposedly a
bit easier to configure is Privoxy here: http://www.privoxy.org/ Also, the
free Google Tool Bar has a builtin popup blocker which is fairly effective.

Also, if you're comfortable allowing changes to the registry, there is an
approach, IE-SPYAD, using the restricted sites list which can be used for
scripted popups. I use this and it works very well. See here:
https://netfiles.uiuc.edu/ehowes/www/resource.htm



There is additonal information about setting up and using AdShield, and
about using the Restriced Zone (and an additional list) here:
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm and some of the Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQ's) about AdShield here: http://adshield.briankass.com

Lastly, ZoneAlarmPro3/4 has added provisions for stopping adds/popups,
handling cookies, web bugs, and scripting/ActiveX components in addition to
it's firewall functionality. Not free, but I have used it with my other
AdBlocking stuff (AdShield, etc.) turned off as a test, and it appears to be
very good indeed. So far I've experienced no problems at all with it set in
its High Security modes for Ads although others have reported the need to
temporarily turn it off to reach some sites. Also, Agnitum's Outpost
Firewall supports a plug-in for this: "Pre-configured to block most banner
advertisement. Can be configured manually or by simply dragging and dropping
unwanted banners into the Ad Trashcan." I
have no experience as to how effective it is, but I have received a
favorable report.

There's good information about hijacking in general and fixes available for
specific hijackers here: http://www.spywareinfo.com/hijacked.html
http://gmpservicesinc.com/Articles/hijack.asp
http://www.mvps.org/inetexplorer/Darnit.htm#pop_up
http://www.doxdesk.com/parasite/

bc_acadia's list:

"Some popup blockers. All of these are 100% pure freeware, no trial
periods. Some of these do more than just handle popups.

Pow!: http://www.analogx.com/contents/download/network/pow.htm
NoAds: http://www.southbaypc.com/NoAds/
PopupEraser: http://www.webknacks.com/popuperaser.htm
Stop-the-Pop: http://www.bysoft.se/sureshot/stopthepop/index.html
Internet Organizer: http://www.sf.yucom.be/wdprojects/
PopKi: http://ranfo.com/popki.html
PopUpPopper: http://www.bayden.com/Popper/default.asp
PopUpKiller: http://sourceforge.net/projects/puk/
AdCruncher Proxy:
http://home.sprintmail.com/~dtrout/AdCruncher/ReadMe.html
KillAd: http://www.wplus.net/pp/fsc/
ClickOff: http://www.johanneshuebner.com/en/download.html
PopupBuster: http://www.popupbuster.com/PopUpBuster/
Free Surfer: http://www.kolumbus.fi/eero.muhonen/FS/
Window Shades: http://www.g-m-m.com/Software/WindowShades/index.php
AdShield (my personal favorite): http://www.adshield.org/
PopupStopper: http://www.panicware.com/popupstopper.html
Proxomitron (has learning curve): http://www.proxomitron.org/
For those who don't want third party stuff, your own pc's built-in
host file:
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm and
http://www.smartin-designs.com/ and http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/


Here is a review of 61 popup killers, not all of them are free:
http://www.popup-killer-review.com/index.htm"

NOTE that this site also contains a good, comprehensive series of popup
killer tests. Some good additional tests are also available here:
http://www.webknacks.com/aptest.htm

There's another popup test page here:
http://www.kephyr.com/popupkillertest/index.html


Another good test page and lists of both free and cost popup blockers is
here: http://www.popuptest.com/ Recommended



If you install and keep UPDATED a good HOSTS file, it can help you avoid
most adware/malware. See here: <http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm>
(Be sure it's named/renamed HOSTS - all caps, no extension)



You might want to consider installing the SpywareBlaster and SpywareGuard
here to help prevent this kind of thing and other malware from happening in
the future:
http://www.javacoolsoftware.com/spywareblaster.html (Prevents malware Active
X installs) (BTW, SpyWare Blaster is not memory resident ... no CPU or
memory load - but keep it UPDATED) The latest version as of this writing
will prevent installation or prevent the malware from running if it is
already installed, and it provides information and fixit-links for a variety
of parasites.
http://www.wilderssecurity.net/spywareguard.html (Monitors for attempts to
install malware) Both Very Highly Recommended.

Perhaps these will help.

--
Please respond in the same thread.
Regards, Jim Byrd, MS-MVP



In
 
F

Fabrizio

Dear all!!

I am sorry to inform you that any of your suggestions worked to solve my
problem!
So I have decided to reinstall Windows and forget about it!

I want to thank you all for your suggestions, explanations, and tips!

Cheers

Fabrizio
 

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