Google continues to struggle with cybercriminals running malicious ads on its search platform to trick people into downloading booby-trapped copies of popular free software applications. The malicious ads, which appear above organic search results and often precede links to legitimate sources of the same software, can make searching for software on Google a dicey affair.

    • Zworf@beehaw.org
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      10 months ago

      Yes especially since Google is making it harder to spot the ads among legitimate content now :(

  • aard@kyu.de
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    10 months ago

    You nowadays even need to pay attention on Android as you might get an “software related to what you’re currently trying to install” with an install button on top of the install button you want - in the location where the install button used to be in googles playstore. Whoever came up with that stupid idea needs their computer privileges revoked for the rest of their life.

    • HarkMahlberg@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Whoever came up with that stupid idea needs their computer privileges revoked for the rest of their life.

      Wish granted: that person is now the CEO of AdSense and has a dozen EA’s to handle their computer for them.

  • dan@upvote.au
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    10 months ago

    On Windows, use Winget and/or Chocolatey to download your software when possible. There’s an unofficial site at https://winget.run/ that lets you browse all available Winget packages.

    Microsoft store is good too, but not everything is listed there.

          • jarfil@beehaw.org
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            10 months ago

            Yeah.

            rant

            What’s ironic, is that so many years later (what’s it been, 10 already?), Chocolatey’s “inferior approach”, even competing against now “Microsoft’s own” Winget, ends up with more failed updates on the Winget team than the Choco team. Which just goes to show what everyone has been saying from the beginning: that the core problem is, and has always been, on the installer side, not so much on the package manager side.

            At least Vista has solved the “DLL hell” problem, maybe in another 10 years some future Windows will have an installer experience similar to Linux from 10 years ago. Powertoys somewhat recently introduced a “what’s using this file” tool… maybe that’s a step in the right direction towards noticing the need for a CoW approach to open files, or is that just wishful thinking? 🙄

  • ares35@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    this isn’t anything new. fake downloads, malware, and scam support sites and links and phone numbers have been a thing in results since they started putting paid placements and ads in serp… and even before then, back when simple keyword spam could game the algorithms.