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11 Signs of Spyware
By Neil
J. Rubenking
March 2, 2004
PC
Magazine
- You find a new finger-size hardware device connected between your keyboard
cable's plug and the corresponding socket on the back of your computer. Or
maybe someone recently offered you "a better keyboard."
- Your phone bill includes expensive calls to 900 numbers that you never made—probably
at an outrageous per-minute rate.
- You enter a search term in Internet Explorer's address bar and press Enter
to start the search. Instead of your usual search site, an unfamiliar site
handles the search.
- Your antispyware program or another protective program stops working correctly.
It may warn you that certain necessary support files are missing, but if you
restore the files they go missing again. It may appear to launch normally
and then spontaneously shut down, or it may simply crash whenever you try
to run it.
- A new item appears in your Favorites list without your putting it there.
No matter how many times you delete it, the item always reappears later.
- Your system runs noticeably slower than it did before. If you're a Windows
2000/XP user, launching the Task Manager and clicking the Processes tab reveals
that an unfamiliar process is using nearly 100 percent of available CPU cycles.
- At a time when you're not doing anything online, the send or receive lights
on your dial-up or broadband modem blink just as wildly as when you're downloading
a file or surfing the Web. Or the network/modem icon in your system tray flashes
rapidly even when you're not using the connection.
- A search toolbar or other browser toolbar appears even though you didn't
request or install it. Your attempts to remove it fail, or it comes back after
removal.
- You get pop-up advertisements when your browser is not running or when your
system is not even connected to the Internet, or you get pop-up ads that address
you by name.
- When you start your browser, the home page has changed to something undesirable.
You change it back manually, but before long you find that it has changed
back again.
- And the final sign is: Everything appears to be normal. The most devious
spyware doesn't leave traces you'd notice, so scan your system anyway.
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