News
Computer Users Overeager To Click Pop-up 'OKs'
New research shows that most Web surfers are too eager to get rid of error messages that could be fake and potentially harmful
September 25, 2008 — CSO —
Web surfers have a standard reaction to error messages that pop up in their Web browsers, according to new research published this week: They click "OK" and hope it will disappear.
Psychologists at North Carolina State University found that computer users have a hard time distinguishing between fake Windows warning messages and the real thing. In an experiment that tested the responses of 42 Web-browsing university students, they found that almost two-thirds of them - 63 percent - would click "OK" whenever they saw a popup warning, whether it was fake or not.
"Many people fall for this style of attack by not recognizing the visual elements that separate real and fake warning windows," the researchers concluded in a paper delivered at an academic conference in New York this week.
That's bad news, security experts say, because fake popup messages can take you to some very bad places on the Internet.
In the experiment, users tended to see the popup windows as an irritant that they needed to get rid of as quickly as possible, said Mike Wogalter, a psychology professor at North Carolina State who co-authored the study. "They really didn't think about it at all," he said.
Clicking on a fake popup window can take you to a Web site you may not have intended to visit, but there can be nastier results as well. In one well-known scam, victims are sent an e-mail with a link to a Web page that promises an interesting video clip. When they try to watch it, however, a popup message tells them they need to install special codec software to view the video.
In fact, the software is a Trojan downloader that then laces the victim's computer with malicious software such as keyloggers that track usernames and passwords.
To make matters worse, fake popups are increasingly found on legitimate Web sites, often delivered via online advertising networks, said Eric Howes, director of malware research with security vendor Sunbelt Software. "It's becoming a real problem because a few years ago, you would only see these fake popups on some of the seedier places on the Internet."
Harvard Assistant Professor Ben Edelman agrees that deceptive popups are a big problem. "These are widespread, particularly when you stop one notch below the very fanciest news sites," he said. "If you go to MySpace or if you just run Google searches and click on results, you're likely to stumble on such ads."
While it's easy to blame users for missing bogus error messages, Wogalter said software developers who have overwhelmed their users with too many warning messages should also share the blame. "They shouldn't be putting people into this sort of position," he said.
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