Do not click on saucy videos on Facebook this week – a new computer Trojan is spreading via X-rated videos on the site, and is tagging people’s Mums and everybody in dirty films. The embarrassing new Trojan tags people’s Mums, bosses and random friends in X-rated clips and shares them on people’s walls.The ‘clever’ part is that the malicious software automatically tags 20 of each victim’s friends in a video when it posts, so the randomly selected friends see it in their freed – and their friends see it too.
The video link tries to trick users into downloading a file (it says that it needs additional software to play), then once downloaded, takes over a victim’s PC entirely. Security software vendor Sophos says, ‘A video link that suddenly needs additional software is almost certainly a bait-and-switch scam. You’re promised X but that’s just so the crooks can foist Y on you. If you can’t resist the initial bait, at least avoid the switch!
Your friend in facebook did not post a porn video to their Facebook. Don’t even get curious and click on it. At least 11,000 Facebook users found themselves victims of the latest social media hacking scheme.
Some people who play Internet will have come across with strange symptoms, symptoms such as CD-Rom drive is still open, close it out a little bit into the machine, it is music I don't know anything about it, but thought that the Ghost is not real comfortable, but now there are computer intruders into the machine and have come to control you. The ability of this Trojan horse of wood, the owner doesn't have to do this but can cause a crash at a time. The ability of Trojans are very easy to understand, which is that the intruder can do anything to get you just as he was sitting in front of you. There’s a new password-swiping virus spreading on Facebook, and once again the malware preys on the social trust accrued by the network. Over 800,000 people have already been affected by the virus, which looks like a video sent by a friend. Once someone clicks on it, they are routed to a website that tells them they need to download a plug-in to watch the video. And if they download the plug-in is when trouble starts. The download gives the malware creators access to a user’s password, often for email as well as Facebook and Twitter. This gives the attacker the ability to pretend to be their victim, potentially wringing more personal information out of their accounts. This is how the virus spreads; since the attackers have access to the infected accounts, they use those handles to reach out to other victims, spreading the video.