Facebook takes on 'clickjacking' spammers in court
Facebook and the state of Washington sued a company on Thursday they accused of a practice called "clickjacking" that fools users of the world's top social network into visiting advertising sites, divulging personal information and spreading the scam to friends.
Facebook and the state of Washington sued a company on Thursday they accused of a practice called 'clickjacking' that fools users of the world's top social network into visiting advertising sites, divulging personal information and spreading the scam to friends.
The scheme, also known as 'likejacking' because victims are tricked into using Facebook's 'Like' button to perpetuate it, has grossed $1.2 million a month for the Delaware-based firm, Adscend Media, according to the state attorney general's office.
Adscend profits from the scam by collecting money from its advertising clients for every Facebook user unwittingly misdirected to a target ad or subscription service, the plaintiffs said.
Two separate but similar claims filed in federal court by the state and Facebook accuse Adscend of violating federal and state statutes outlawing misleading or deceptive commercial electronic communications and unfair business practices.
The legal action is believed to mark the first time any state government has gone to court in a crackdown against spam spread by Facebook, the world's most widely used social media network, said Paula Selis, senior counsel for the attorney general.
She said schemes such as clickjacking have grown steadily more pervasive, and that millions of Facebook users have probably been exposed to Adscend's spam.
Attorney General Rob McKenna, a Republican running for governor, said Washington state was taking action because 'we've brought other cases like this and, more than any other state, we've developed technological and legal expertise' in the field of cyber fraud.
Representatives of Adscend or two co-owners also named as defendants could not immediately be reached for comment.
Pages designed as bait
As described in the lawsuits, the scam works as follows:
Facebook pages designed as 'bait' are disseminated to social network users as posts that seemingly originate from friends, offering visitors an opportunity to view salacious or
provocative content.
However, that viewing is contingent on completing a series of steps that will supposedly unlock the content but are actually designed to lure Facebook users onto other sites, where they are tricked into giving away personal information or signing up for expensive mobile subscription services.
First the victims are encouraged to click the 'Like' button on the Facebook 'bait' page, which then alerts their friends to the page's existence, thus helping propagate it. Then they are told they cannot reach the content without filling out a form for an online survey or advertising offer.
In some cases, a hidden code embedded in an enticing link on the 'bait' page activates the 'Like' button without the user even clicking it, sending it to friends' news feeds.
Selis said it may seem unlikely that anyone would click on such links, 'but unfortunately they do.'
While the number of Facebook users actually scammed by clickjacking is not known, Selis said investigators have determined that some 280,000 users visited the locked content pages of Adscend during February 2011 alone.
'So we know there are probably millions of Facebook users' exposed to the deception, she said.
Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes said the Adscend action was the latest in 'our pursuit and support for civil and criminal consequences for spammers or others who attempt to harm Facebook or the people who use our service.'
He cited three federal court judgments worth several hundred million dollars each obtained by Facebook against spammers since 2008.
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