Direct Revenue Has To Pay Back Only A Tiny Portion Of Money Made From Adware
from the punishment? dept
Adware firm Direct Revenue was considered one of the absolutely worst companies when it came to surreptitious installs of nasty adware/malware on computers. This was the company that changed its name a bunch of times to avoid getting caught. It then claimed that it was cleaning up its act, but was caught still being just as bad (it even had its own spyware uninstall other spyware) and then threatened anti-spyware firms for outing their bad practices. Eventually, the company had to face the music and today the FTC announced that it had settled with DirectRevenue. However, the "settlement" isn't making everyone happy. They've apparently agreed to pay a $1.5 million fine -- but as a dissenting FTC Commissioner noted, "it apparently leaves DirectRevenue's owners lining their pockets with more than $20 million from a business model based on deceit." That doesn't seem like it will act as much of a deterrent. I'm sure plenty of companies would be willing to pay a $1.5 million fine if they got to walk away with $20 million. On the more positive side, the settlement bars the company from delivering any more ads to computers that are still stuck with their adware.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Lucky for the already infected....
I'm sure the owners were already working on making a new company while they were in talks with the FTC.
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Silly question
What's going be the fine if the company doesn't keep this part of the agreement?
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The govt has become their partner in crime
buck
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Adware deception
Fed Up with it,
RF.
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Re: Silly question
This is the FTC we're talking about. They've ignored the spam problem for fifteen years, and only took action against a tiny handful of the most egregious adware and spyware creeps when there was overwhelming public pressure to do something. Now they will claim they've solved the problem, and go back to ignoring it.
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I'm sorry at the semi hijacking of the thread...but Ruben's turn to historical acts is also nonsense. Since the beginning of time, man has conquered and has been conquered. Survival of the fittest. I'm sure if Ruben went far enough back he'll find his ancestors were amongst a group who conquered another land...in Latin America, maybe? The battle of land is still going on today and will still be happening until man's extinction. I offer no apologizes for the early America settlers.
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Re: The govt has become their partner in crime
The enforcement agencies do not make law. They make findings.
The violator was fined the maximum amount allowed by law.
If you do not like it, then take the same amount of time you took to create your comment, and complain to your congressional representatives.
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stupid govermnet
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re: stupid gov't by mike
Like in Germany where traffic fines are assessed based on income for instance, heard that they hit some bigwig for around $20,000 for speeding. Thats gotta hurt.
But we all know that companies have been playing the "We will do it till we get spanked, then settle for a fraction of profits" game forever.
'Course, to be fair, I remember when George Harrison stole some old motown song, made around 20 mil, and wound up settling for around 1-2 mil with the copyright holders...and he said that was pretty much in the plan from the git go. Just business as usual.
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