Facebook Bolsters Malware Protection

From PC World: Facebook has cemented a new partnership to protect its users against malicious links posted on their walls, news feeds, and elsewhere in the social network. You know, those links from someone you haven't seen in years encouraging you to click through to the photos of how "you waz sooo crazy at that party last night!!!" or some such. Click on one and you could be welcoming all kinds of nasty stuff into your account and even your hard drive.

Facebook will now be using Websense to clamp down a little tighter, adding the company's "Advanced Classification Engine" on the back end. When a user clicks on a link inside Facebook, it's passed on to ACE, which lives in the cloud and is constantly checking for new threats. If ACE has already classified the site in question as a threat, it sends a warning message back to the user.

ACE is the same technology behind the TRITON security package that's used by many enterprises, so it's pretty rapid at picking up on new bugs and malicious campaigns and classifying them, but that doesn't mean it will be fast enough to catch every nasty link on Facebook before a few users click through.

A link that goes viral on the social network can often spread faster than just about anything -- and when that viral link also happens to be a virus accessing your list of friends and reposting itself all over without your permission, it can soon be anywhere. The good news is that the quicker it spreads, the quicker ACE is likely to pick up on it and classify it as nasty.

View: Article @ Source Site