![]() There are Facbook apps loaded on those pages, but there are also some others too, so I'm not sure yet where it's coming from. I do know it's an iFrame injection, but not yet sure if it's really malicious or not. ![]() That information so I can do some research on exactly what it really is. As it turns out, I just checked the links again myself, and did finally get the pop-up alert again. I was looking for whether there was a log Avast keeps that I could check for the message I got. Warnings showed up for all browsers (you name it, I have it It was the top three and the bottom links on the page I posted.Īctually guys, I wasn't really looking for anyone to test the sites. The other designer, I hear, doesn't want the job anymore anyway, but even so I don't want to take over and have the first issue I raised make me sound like a total idiot.ĭoes Avast keep any logs of the pop-up alerts? It's to late to "view last pop-up." I can see it in the GUI graph under Real Time Shields, but I need the exact warning message I got at the time. I feel like a noobie asking this, but where can I dig up the logs on what was reported by Avast three days ago? I can't remember the Trojan name the pop-up showed, and it isn't showing up at all anymore visiting the sites. I want to be able to report to management "This is what it was." not, "Well, it could have been this, or that, I'm not sure what it really was." At the very least, whether or not they were or are a real problem, I want to get to the bottom of what they really were. What bothers me is that I may have raised a false alarm over these Trojans. And I used this "trojan" alert to light a fire under management's behinds to get them more seriously thinking of putting me on the job. ![]() Their current designer is, quite frankly, doing a lousy job. ![]() The problem is, I have been pushing the company to allow me to start redesigning and updating their sites, and they have been dragging their feet. Today, I can't get the pop up to appear at all on any of the sites so I believe the definition updates cleared up what was most likely just misinformation. I don't believe this is a real malware problem, but rather more likely another one of Facebook's feature additions that the AV simply didn't know about yet, and blocked. A couple of days ago I was getting some Trojan warnings on a few of my company's sites, all via iFrames. ![]()
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December 2022
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