Malware authors use celebrities claim to attract and infect the computers of bit cautious users. Heidi Klum has replaced Cameron Diaz as the most dangerous search. The model Heidi Klum has replaced Cameron Diaz as the celebrity most commonly used by cybercriminals to introduce malware (malicious software) on computers when Internet searches are made with his name, according to the list for the fifth year published McAfee. The multinational security points out that cybercriminals commonly used names of celebrities to attract web sites with malicious software and thus, searches of Heidi Klum, downloads of Heidi Klum, photos of Heidi Klum News and videos of Heidi Klum, are those most at risk of being infected. McAfee research reveals that users who seek and downloaded the latest pictures of Heidi Klum have a 9% chance of ending in a web page of malicious software. In press release, Paula Greve, Director of research at the McAfee Web security, points out that this year celebrities searches are safer in 2010, but that Heidi Klum has passed since number 10 to 1 of your list in a single year. Behind Heidi Klum, the most dangerous searches correspond to the actress Cameron Diaz, editor and British journalist Piers Morgan and actress Jessica Biel, followed by Kathrine Heigl which makes the role of Izzi in Grey’s anatomy. From the list of the 10 most dangerous have emerged this year the model Gisele Bunden and actors Tom Cruise, Penelope Cruz, Jennifer Love Hewit, Nicole Kidman and Julia Roberts. Source of the news: Heidi Klum, the search with more risk in Internet
Tag: News-last-minute
March Corruption
Meanwhile, in Internet forums many netizens have expressed their fear about the veracity of the information that will be published, by the problems that false rumors can cause to the creators of these sites and also by the fact that the portals should become a business. A surfer who signs as Jason, said that such initiatives can be used as tools for nonprofit to extort money from the possible involved in an act of corruption or to further develop the market delete photos or compromising information that already exists on the internet. In China the price by delete information published on the Internet, as the netizens, is around $300 were told. Suppressing a report of Tianya.cn, one of the most popular forums in the country, costing around 2,200 Yuan (339 dollars), while the price per delete it from other sites is 1,500 Yuan ($231), and by deleting photos from the base of Baidu, the Chinese search engine, the cost is a minimum of 300 yuan (46 dollars). But despite the fears that exist by the opening of the websites I I paid a bribe in the Chinese forums, the majority of participants were positive by the emergence of this idea to help curb corruption afflicting the country, in an unusual manner. In India, the portal paid a bribe unveiled more than 10,000 cases of corruption behind which stood at more than 20 government officials in less than a year. In December of last year, a report from the Chinese Government admitted that the problem of corruption is very serious; officers reported having investigated more than 240,000 cases in the past seven years, including cases of bribery and embezzlement. The Chinese Prime Minister, Wen Jiabao, ratified in March this year that corruption in China is one of the main problems of the country.