Redirects

xoxoxoBruce • May 17, 2010 12:55 am
In both IE-7 and Firefox, I have the default search set to Google. So I type something in the search box and hit search, sure enough the Google results come up.

But then, when I click on the Google links, maybe 70% of the time I get redirected. Not porn sites, and different sites each time.

Now if I click the Google link on my desktop, Google opens in the same IE-7. I can enter a query and the Google search results come up the same as when I search from the IE-7 and Firefox search boxes. But now I can click on any Google link without a redirect.

WTF?
Undertoad • May 17, 2010 2:03 am
Possible infection? Via bogus toolbars maybe?
Gravdigr • May 17, 2010 2:19 am
Set it on fire. Now!
xoxoxoBruce • May 17, 2010 3:04 am
Could be an infection, but AVG, Malwarebytes, and MS malicious code removal, can't find it.
No tool bars other than the ones IE-7 and Firefox came with. I even reinstalled IE-7. And the original query goes to the real Google, it's the Google links that get redirected. Other links, from other sites go through fine.
spudcon • May 17, 2010 6:53 am
It's the Chinese commies!
squirell nutkin • May 17, 2010 9:02 am
Bruce,
I had the same thing, I think it is called pagehijacker virus
I had it and had to switch to chrome. I tried rubotted, malwarebytes, avg, kaspersky, and a couple of others I don't recall. Nothing.

Chrome helped. Maybe it's a nefarious plot by google to get people to switch to chrome.
/tinfoil hat
GunMaster357 • May 17, 2010 10:05 am
I use "Spybot - Search & Destroy" to kill malware and "BitDefender - Total Security 2010" for everything else.

Also, if at all possible, I never install toolbars in any of my navigators (IE8 / Firefox 3.6 / Opera 10, etc...)
Gravdigr • May 17, 2010 4:20 pm
GunMaster357;656795 wrote:
I use "Spybot - Search & Destroy" to kill malware and "BitDefender - Total Security 2010" for everything else.

Also, if at all possible, I never install toolbars in any of my navigators (IE8 / Firefox 3.6 / Opera 10, etc...)


Word.
Flint • May 17, 2010 4:21 pm
If you spend more than an hour on something you should have just reloaded Windows.
spudcon • May 19, 2010 12:46 pm
Secunia PSI found unpatched weaknesses in Chrome. I uninstalled it.
classicman • May 19, 2010 1:32 pm
engrish transration prease, mr. potatoman
lumberjim • May 19, 2010 9:31 pm
jinx and I had this issue with our desktop. mbpark (who we STILL owe cookies to) recommended the ultimate bootcd. As I understand it, it boots to a faux windows environment, and lets you run antivirus and malware apps without the indigenous windows OS that the virus is hiding in. you build this disc, boot to it, and run the avg and malware, and it scrubs the gunk off your schmizzle.

i mailed a boot cd to bruce today. he says he's gonna get a new windows 7 system cuz he's due anyway....but, for those of you that have had this issue.....try the ultimate boot cd cure. it worked for us.
SteveDallas • May 26, 2010 6:24 pm
Flint;656857 wrote:
If you spend more than an hour on something you should have just reloaded Windows.

From a [former] cow-orker:
But I don't want you to just wipe it out and start over. I want you to actually figure out what the problem is and fix it!!
SteveDallas • May 26, 2010 6:29 pm
I'll have to try the boot CD. My daughter's has it... completely resistant to all antivirus etc. I've tried. Well I should say it's what's left over after I cleaned it up from being so fucked up it would run programs you double-clicked on because it didn't know what to do with a .exe file. And of COURSE, "no, I didn't notice anything." grrr.
lumberjim • May 31, 2010 9:13 am
did you get the disc, squirrel?
squirell nutkin • May 31, 2010 2:32 pm
Thanks, I did and I found a handful of things that were suspect. I need to do a complete scan and install malware bytes.

I made this out of the dollar to send back to you, and this morning I found my kid had gutted it.

I'm gonna try Firefox again and see if the re-direct thing is gone.
Flint • May 31, 2010 4:12 pm
Flint;656857 wrote:
If you spend more than an hour on something you should have just reloaded Windows.


SteveDallas;658640 wrote:
From a [former] cow-orker:
But I don't want you to just wipe it out and start over. I want you to actually figure out what the problem is and fix it!!

Funny, because that part is more like "I have some free time to jack around and learn something new (maybe/maybe not useful), which really doesn't advance any business objectives unless this is, or is likely to be a recurring issue."

It's like they are asking you to waste your time. On the clock.