By: Elmo Kandel
Internet Explorer has a way for a website to add itself
to the list of favorites. It’s a feature Microsoft
added so that websites can have a button that says
“Bookmark This Site! Just Click Here!”
Now, if that’s all that particular feature
did, then there wouldn’t be any malware concerns
over it. Unscrupulous programmers have taken advantage
of it to create Home Page Hijackers.
In a nutshell, a Home Page Hijacker is a program
that reaches into your browser and changes your homepage…without
your permission. You might think, “That’s
easy enough to fix, just change my homepage back and
everything is fine.”
Unfortunately, the Hijacker won’t let you get
away with that, thanks to a BHO, or Browser Helper
Object.
The BHO is a chunk of code that gets added to the
browser. It’s meant as a quick and easy expansion
to the browser, but when malware programmers get their
hands on it, it becomes something a lot more sinister.
A Homepage Hijacker will both change the homepage
and bookmarks, and install a BHO. The “helpful”
BHO has been programmed to make sure the homepage
hijacker sticks around.
What this means is, every time the computer is rebooted,
and/or every time the browser is started, the BHO
kicks in for just a second.. It “restores”
the bookmark file and homepage setting.
Homepage Hijackers, with their associated BHO modules,
have been known to change the homepage, remove entries
from bookmarks, add anywhere from one to hundreds
of bookmarks, and even change the default search settings.
This way, when a user misspells a web site address,
instead of seeing the usual IE "I can't find
that" page, he sees an ad-covered search page.
At their worst, homepage hijackers force the user
to go through their web sites and search engines to
get to any site on the 'net.