The Hindu : Sci-Tech / Internet : Fake 'Dislike' button spreads across Facebook
WASHINGTON, August 17, 2010 


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Graham Cluley of the British security firm Sophos wrote in a blog that the fake 
Dislike buttons "are going viral" on Facebook.
APGraham Cluley of the British security firm Sophos wrote in a blog that the 
fake Dislike buttons "are going viral" on Facebook. 

Social networking website Facebook, which offers its subscribers only a "Like" 
button for anyone's updates, is now faced with a fake "Dislike" button, which
is spreading like a virus across the site. 

The fake Dislike button is followed with a link that takes people to a fake 
application. Instead of installing a Dislike button, the application uses the
person's network to continue spreading the fake programme. 

Graham Cluley of the British security firm Sophos wrote in a blog that the fake 
Dislike buttons "are going viral" on Facebook. 

"Watch out for posts that look like this: I just got the Dislike button, so now 
I can Dislike all of your dumb posts!" CNN quoted Cluley as writing in the
blog. 

"If you do give the application permission to run, it silently updates your 
Facebook status to promote the link that tricked you in the first place, thus
spreading the message virally to your Facebook friends and online contacts," he 
wrote. 

A message on technology blog Mashable said, "As usual, we advise you not to 
click on suspicious links on Facebook, especially if they promise something
that sounds impossible or unlikely. Do not give away your personal information, 
unless you're absolutely sure why and who you're giving it to." 

Cluley said the fake Dislike button is part of a recent trend of Facebook 
scams. "It's the latest survey scam spreading virally across Facebook, using the
tried-and-tested formula used in the past by other viral scams." 

Such schemes are designed to steal information from internet users. That 
information then can be sold to other parties. The scams are also used to affect
an internet user's social network contacts. 

The experts give the following advice to avoid the fake button, "If you 
accidentally installed the fake application, click on the 'account' button at 
the
top right of the Facebook home screen. Navigate to the option that says 
'application settings' and disable the fake 'Dislike' application." 

"If the application is posted to your Facebook wall, go to your profile page 
and delete those posts to stop the scam from spreading further." 

Facebook has said it is trying to block the "Dislike" button. 

"We're working hard to block and remove malicious applications that claim to 
provide Dislike functionality and inadvertently update people's statuses,"
a Facebook spokesman said. 

"There is no official Dislike button. Also, don't click on strange links, even 
if they are from friends, and notify the person and report the link if you
see something suspicious," the statement said. 
E Renuka,
SECTION OFFICER,
ICT CENTRE FOR VISUALLY CHALLENGED,
CHMK LIBRARY,
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
CALICUT, UNIVERSITY P O,
MALAPPURAM DISTRICT,
KERALA.
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