FTC to pay millions to consumers duped by scareware

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) will partially recoup some 300,000 people who fell victim to a scam in which they purchased rogue anti-virus products to fix problems that didn't exist. The money comes from a more-than-$8-million settlement between the FTC and several parties, including Innovative Marketing, whose members were indicted in 2010. The defendants were accused of spreading so-called scareware products, which are sold to consumers after they are falsely made to believe their computers are infected with malware. The FTC expects to award each victim around $20, but it could be more depending on individual loss. "We do a lot of consumer redress," an FTC spokeswoman told SCMagazineUS.com on Friday.

More in News

Privacy-bolstering "Apps Act" introduced in House

The bill would provide consumers nationwide with similar protections already enforced by a California law.

Microsoft readies permanent fix for Internet Explorer bug used in energy attacks

Microsoft is prepping a whopper of a security update that will close 33 vulnerabilities, likely including an Internet Explorer (IE) flaw that has been used in targeted website attacks against the U.S. government.

Weakness in Adobe ColdFusion allowed court hackers access to 160K SSNs

Up to 160,000 Social Security numbers and one million driver's license numbers may have been accessed by intruders.