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#1
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Please tell me if this is done already, this is my first thread in the UL section and I feel like maybe I have something new.
This is a post I found on another forum I'm on, and I looked around, but it seems that everything about it just happened today. To me, this is quite important. To both users and non-users of Norton Antivirus software. Recently a few of you may have had a popup saying that 'pifts.exe' wants to access the internet and asks for your permission. Pifts.exe seems to be attempting to contact a server in Africa and so far it is known that it reads and records your internet browsing history. When Symantec customers posted on the forums asking about it the posts were removed and the users were banned. Banning their own customers is a little strange, just what are they trying to cover up? Virtually no information is available on pifts.exe on the internet and when something appears the website is immediatly removed. Even Digg went down for several hours for posting about it. Furthermore, when I run a Google search for 'pifts.exe' it says there are around 300,000 results but the search has been tampered with as only two pages show. A few moments ago the Symantec website went down for 'maintanence' and when it came back up all of the pifts posts were removed and the word 'pifts' was banned from the website. Also, one person contributed this: PIFTS Public Internet and File Tracking System It goes offshore because there's no law forbidding sending it to foreign governments. If governments want to spy on their own citizens, it is normal for them to have foreigners do it in order to get around normal restrictions about spying on their own people. This is why there have been reports of the file sending data to Africa. |
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#2
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HowStuffWorks and The Register are covering it, but no conclusions have really been made yet. Symantec's stance is, indeed, very odd here.
ETA: I wonder what the "popular urban myths site" mentioned in one of the articles is? |
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#3
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The thing I don't get is there's no evidence that the threads were deleted, and users were banned.
It's like me saying that Snopes won't cover the puppies-in-a-blanket myth, and that all threads started about it got deleted and all users who talked about it were banned. It also seems that all the information on the different sites is all the same. |
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#4
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Quote:
Nick |
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#5
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Nick, I see what you mean. I'm still not sure it's some vast conspiracy, though.
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#6
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It may not be a vast conspiracy, but if Symantec is somehow spying on their users it would be something they'd try to conceal. Their brand is already somewhat embattled.
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#7
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The thread I linked to has images to how Norton's message board looked earlier today--a whole lot of pifts. I think the main reason [or excuse depending on your view] why any messages involving pifts.exe gets deleted now is due to the spammers causing havoc. Granted, that doesn't exactly explain why the original posts mention in the TweakTown article, which were apparently a genuine question about something, were deleted though.
For some strange reason, I'm getting deja vu vibes here. |
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#8
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Quote:
BTW, there are reports that the bad guys are now putting up pages linking the phrase "pifts.exe" to malware, so be careful of what you click. Nick Last edited by Nick Theodorakis; 10 March 2009 at 07:17 PM. Reason: added emphasis |
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#9
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Quote:
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#10
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Anybody a member of the Symantec forum? What happens if you post about "pifts"?
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#11
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I have often said I refuse to trust or use Norton or Macafee... good thing I kept with that. I've used AVG Free for a number of years now and never have I had a problem.
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#12
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Aww...the conspiracy is over. Norton product patch "PIFTS.exe" and Norton Users Forum
Apparently, Pifts was just a patch, and some confused user asked about it, but then the thread was invaded by a bunch of people with new accounts posting crap: Quote:
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#13
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I've been sort of keeping up with this since I heard about it this morning. I've been mostly reading up on this thread about it.
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread444230/pg1 Yes, I realize that the topic is on a conspiracy theory board [and the layout of the board is a bit hard to navigate through], but it actually seems like there are some people posting there who have a good head on their shoulders [at least in the beginning anyway]. So far, there hasn't been any solid answers on just what the heck is going on, though it appears that certain individuals seemed to have spammed the official Norton forums to the point where they had to shut it down, though as I type this the boards are back up. The only thing I can really get from all of this is that someone really NFBSKed up somewhere. ETA: In regards to the deletion of the posts about the file, it seemed like there was one or two posts about it before it got spammed, so at the very least, someone noticed it before then. |
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#14
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It's not the first time Symantec has effed up:
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Spyware/?p=747 http://www.politechbot.com/p-02851.html Not to mention their totally horrific user interface and system resource waste. That is reason enough to boycott them, especially as there are better and cheaper (even free) alternatives. |
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