[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

The Media Flips Over Tulsi & Matt Gaetz, Biden & Trump Take A Pic, & Famous People Leave Twitter!

4 arrested in California car insurance scam: 'Clearly a human in a bear suit'

Silk Road Founder Trusts Trump To 'Honor His Pledge' For Commutation

"You DESERVED to LOSE the Senate, the House, and the Presidency!" - Jordan Peterson

"Grand Political Theatre"; FBI Raids Home Of Polymarket CEO; Seize Phone, Electronics

Schoolhouse Limbo: How Low Will Educators Go To Better Grades?

BREAKING: U.S. Army Officers Made a Desperate Attempt To Break Out of The Encirclement in KURSK

Trumps team drawing up list of Pentagon officers to fire, sources say

Israeli Military Planning To Stay in Gaza Through 2025

Hezbollah attacks Israeli army's Tel Aviv HQ twice in one day

People Can't Stop Talking About Elon's Secret Plan For MSNBC And CNN Is Totally Panicking

Tucker Carlson UNLOADS on Diddy, Kamala, Walz, Kimmel, Rich Girls, Conspiracy Theories, and the CIA!

"We have UFO technology that enables FREE ENERGY" Govt. Whistleblowers

They arrested this woman because her son did WHAT?

Parody Ad Features Company That Offers to Cryogenically Freeze Liberals for Duration of TrumpÂ’s Presidency

Elon and Vivek BEGIN Reforming Government, Media LOSES IT

Dear Border Czar: This Nonprofit Boasts A List Of 400 Companies That Employ Migrants

US Deficit Explodes: Blowout October Deficit Means 2nd Worst Start To US Fiscal Year On Record

Gaetz Resigns 'Effective Immediately' After Trump AG Pick; DC In Full Blown Panic

MAHA MEME

noone2222 and John Bolton sitting in a tree K I S S I N G

Donald Trump To Help Construct The Third Temple?

"The Elites Want To ROB Us of Our SOVEREIGNTY!" | Robert F Kennedy

Take Your Money OUT of THESE Banks NOW! - Jim Rickards

Trump Taps Tulsi Gabbard As Director Of National Intelligence

DC In Full Blown Panic After Trump Picks Matt Gaetz For Attorney General

Cleveland Clinic Warns Wave of Mass Deaths Will Wipe Out Covid-Vaxxed Within ‘5 Years’

Judah-ism is as Judah-ism does

Danger ahead: November 2024, Boston Dynamics introduces a fully autonomous "Atlas" robot. Robot humanoids are here.

Trump names [Fox News host] Pete Hegseth as his Defense secretary


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: Google and its "safe browsing" database
Source: Scroogle
URL Source: http://www.scroogle.org/cgi-bin/scraper.htm
Published: Feb 18, 2009
Author: Scroogle
Post Date: 2009-02-18 11:54:27 by X-15
Keywords: None
Views: 92
Comments: 1

About 1.2 percent of all scrapes of Google's results done by Scroogle show at least one "safe browsing" interception by Google. This is consistent with the 1.3 percent figure in Google's own report, "All Your iFRAMEs Point to Us," dated February 4, 2008.

The way that Google handles these interceptions is by prefacing the link in their search results with www.google.com/interstitial, which sends the searcher to Google's page for more information. On Google's results page itself, it identifies such listings with the words, "This site may harm your computer."

Scroogle has always respected this format for such links, and now we also show "Google intercepts this link" next to these search results.

We could have ignored these links and stripped the interstitial from the URL, on the grounds that there is not a high correlation between Google's "safe browsing" database and other similar databases. It really depends on how Google chooses to define the word "unsafe," just as the ranking order of any search engine depends on how it defines the word "relevant." There are too many variables between the user's browser and how it interacts with the web, and the numerous techniques available to webmasters, advertisers, and con artists.

How good is Google's quality control with this database? On January 31, 2009 Google accidentally labeled every single link as "harmful" for nearly an hour. That raised a lot of eyebrows. Later we saw an item at Stopbadware.org that was posted by manager Maxim Weinstein on January 20, 2009. He said that Google was now reporting 183,000 badware sites, whereas it was 145,000 "a couple months ago." He had no idea why: "Google has been known to tweak its systems, sometimes leading to a significant increase or decrease of reported hosts without any change in external conditions."

For anyone like us who has had close experience with Google's search-engine rankings since 2001 or so, it's no secret that massive fluctuations can occur even when everything external to Google is fairly stable. Now we know that this is also true of the "safe browsing" database.

If Google marks a site as one that "may harm your computer," at least you can get details on the reasons behind their analysis at www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site=www.example.com (substitute www.example.com with the URL of the target site). And Google, in conjunction with Stopbadware.org, also has a procedure that allows webmasters to appeal and get their site unlisted. That's the good news.

The bad news is that the quality control issue is bothersome. Google also seems a bit stingy with its database. It's easy to find out about a site if you already have one in mind, but as far as we can determine, it's not easy to get a useful random sample of Google's current listing of malware sites. This makes it difficult for independent researchers to evaluate Google's quality control. Our guess is that Google doesn't want competitors to grab major chunks of its "safe browsing" database. Someday it might be profitable to license access to this data to other companies.

On an issue as important as malware, the public interest demands that this information be shared openly, and evaluated openly by independent researchers. If Google disagrees with this notion, then it might be better if they discontinue their research. Their motives are suspicious. Why should they bother with all this research on harmful sites, when adding the option to disable JavaScript in the Chrome browser — an option that's always been in all other browsers — would probably do more for safe browsing in the long run than their entire database will ever do?

For these reasons, Scroogle is recording the first instance of an interstitial URL on every search that produces one, and is making this data available for download. We are doing this in small chunks of one hour at a time. If you want to build up a list for your own use, you can download this page once per hour around the clock. At the same minute of each hour our latest list overwrites the previous list, and we do not archive old lists. This keeps our data current, and it's also the easiest way for us to do this. Anyone who is experienced enough to handle serious malware research will find it trivial to automate these small downloads and combine, sort, purge duplicates, and parse the URLs into something useful.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: X-15 (#0)

goodsearch.com searches for me, and donates to the Salvation Army at the same time.

Iran Truth Now!

Lod  posted on  2009-02-18   14:16:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]