Facebook Partners With Sophos To Identify Potentially MaliciousPosts
Monday April 30, 2012 , 2 min Read
Reducing the spread of malicious links while educating users to make better, more informed decisions Sophos, IT security and data protection company, announced a partnership with Facebook to help protect users from links that lead to malware or malicious sites. Facebook will use the website reputation service provided by Sophos-Labs, global network of research centers of Sophos, along with their own security measures, to help assess whether a largely distributed link is malicious.
When Facebook users click a link, Facebook consults its database of malicious URLs to check the status of the link. Starting today, Sophos-Labs will be feeding malicious URL intelligence into this database. Facebook will inform Facebook users, if the link they clicked on is malicious, and users will be sent to a page that offers the choice to continue at their own risk, return to the previous screen, or obtain more information on why the link was flagged as suspicious. Mac users will also be given the option to download the free Sophos Anti-Virus for Mac Home Edition from the Sophos Facebook Page as part of the Facebook AV Marketplace.
Joe Sullivan, Chief of Security at Facebook said "We are pleased to begin partnering with Sophos to better protect our users both on and off of Facebook. We believe incorporating Sophos, the industry-leading computer security intelligence, and expertise, will help us provide even more security to those using Facebook."
Sophos-Labs is a global network of highly skilled and thoroughly trained analysts renowned for protecting businesses from known and emerging threats, rapidly and immediately. Sophos- Labs expertise covers every area of network security-viruses, spyware, adware, intrusion, spam and malicious web pages. Innovative technologies such as Behavioral Genotype Protection and rapid signature updates are combined to stop new and unknown malware.
Mark Harris, Vice-President at Sophos said "For many hundreds of millions of people, Facebook has become the default forum for sharing and consuming opinions, news and personal content. Because content is typically posted by a trusted source - a friend, many users incorrectly assume links are safe. Scammers often take advantage of the trust relationship to fool users into clicking malicious links. Our partnership with Facebook will educate users to make more informed decisions regarding what they click on and will help reduce the spread of malicious links."