Super F(Ph)ishing?
Superfish has been reported to be pre-installed on several Lenovo laptops. The adware is known to inject third-party ads on Google searches and websites without the user’s permission. Superfish affects the browsers Internet Explorer and Chrome and has proven to be a major annoyance for most users. It is even flagged by most major antivirus or anti-malware companies, including Emsisoft Anti-Malware. Superfish’s file certificate is on Emsisoft’s blacklist and shows behavior blocker alerts when someone tries to execute their adware.
Lenovo claims Superfish is useful software, but temporarily removed it after criticism
Lenovo defended their decision to include Superfish in their computers with a statement:
“Superfish helps users find and discover products visually and instantly analyzes images on the web and presents identical and similar product offers that may have lower prices.”
However due to a lot of complaints from users and pressure form the industry, Lenovo has temporarily removed Superfish from their bloatware list.
“We have temporarily removed Superfish from our consumer systems until such time as Superfish is able to provide a software build that addresses these issues. As for units already on the market, we have requested that Superfish auto-updates a fix that addresses these issues.”
How to scan for and remove Superfish from your computer
If you suspect you have the adware Superfish on your computer, perform a scan with the free Emsisoft Emergency Kit which flags the adware on your computer. To remove Superfish, perform the following steps:
- Press the Windows key + “R” to open the run window.
- Type “certmgr.msc” and hit Enter to open the Windows Certificate Manager.
- Navigate to “Trusted Root Certification Authorities” and its sub-element “Certificates” in the folder tree to the left.
- Check for the certificate entry “Superfish, Inc” on the right side of the window.
- Select it and press the Delete key or right-click and select “Delete”.
Now, your browser doesn’t trust made-up SSL certificates of that adware anymore and you’re on the safe side.
Outlook for quick cash makes vendors blind for security issues
The fact that Lenovo has taken some action and contacted the developers is re-assuring, but the bigger picture is that adware is becoming more and more “acceptable” in the industry and manufacturers shamelessly add such software pre-loaded to their devices. The greater concern is that software like Superfish could turn rogue anytime and do some serious damage to the thousands of users who have unknowingly fallen in their grasp. Vendors blindly trust their advertising partners and don’t question what these actually may install on a system. Apparently, the outlook for quick cash makes them completely blind for security issues they may buy.
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