Join the Mozilla’s Test Days event from 9–15 Jan to test the new Firefox address bar on Firefox Beta 135 and get a chance to win Mozilla swag vouchers! 🎁

Rechercher dans l’assistance

Évitez les escroqueries à l’assistance. Nous ne vous demanderons jamais d’appeler ou d’envoyer un SMS à un numéro de téléphone ou de partager des informations personnelles. Veuillez signaler toute activité suspecte en utilisant l’option « Signaler un abus ».

En savoir plus

Persistent "firefox" page pops up. Is "http://eezaeolarticles.org" legitimate?

  • 1 réponse
  • 1 a ce problème
  • 4 vues
  • Dernière réponse par James

more options

When on news sites, a whole page with Firefox logo and "Urgent Update" takes over. Several bogus sounding updates are offered. Latest is "http://eezaeolarticles.org". A previous one was some variation of "eeefuckyou". Both of these I flushed.

When on news sites, a whole page with Firefox logo and "Urgent Update" takes over. Several bogus sounding updates are offered. Latest is "http://eezaeolarticles.org". A previous one was some variation of "eeefuckyou". Both of these I flushed.

Solution choisie

No neither site is legit. The fake updates exe that these fake sites serve can install things like trojans, viruses or unwanted software based on past reports.

The desktop Firefox is not just for Windows as it is for Mac OSX and Linux also so .exe would not be an effective way to send out Firefox updates. The updates are done internally in Firefox with a .mar file or by download from mozilla.org like say www.mozilla.org/firefox/all/

Even if Mozilla were to use .exe for Firefox updates on Windows, they would be serving them from a *.mozilla.org url and not from random websites with weird names.

You can report sites like these at https://www.mozilla.org/legal/fraud-report/ so Mozilla can try and get the sites dealt with and https://www.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish/ so the sites can be blocked.

Lire cette réponse dans son contexte 👍 0

Toutes les réponses (1)

more options

Solution choisie

No neither site is legit. The fake updates exe that these fake sites serve can install things like trojans, viruses or unwanted software based on past reports.

The desktop Firefox is not just for Windows as it is for Mac OSX and Linux also so .exe would not be an effective way to send out Firefox updates. The updates are done internally in Firefox with a .mar file or by download from mozilla.org like say www.mozilla.org/firefox/all/

Even if Mozilla were to use .exe for Firefox updates on Windows, they would be serving them from a *.mozilla.org url and not from random websites with weird names.

You can report sites like these at https://www.mozilla.org/legal/fraud-report/ so Mozilla can try and get the sites dealt with and https://www.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish/ so the sites can be blocked.