Your Pc's Fate in the Hands of Mostofate

I am willing to bet that if you surf the net, you came in contact with a piece of adware like Mostofate at some point.  We all know that it is tough to keep up with the differences between adware, spyware, malware, or cookies.  Mostofate is adware gone bad.  What does this all mean to us?  If you didn't ask for it, then you don't want it.


Mostofate is a corrupted spin-off of a program called Softofate.  Unfortunately, Mostofate has been largely associated with Softofate, giving them a bad reputation even though they simply supply the toolbars.  If you go to Softofate's website, their privacy page goes above and beyond any efforts to keep your information private.  I have never seen a company that so explicitly explains exactly what kind of data they track.


Softofate specializes in creating tools and source codes for state-of-the-art customized toolbars.  They have developed tool bars like BibleToolbar that put the convenience of biblical references at your fingertips every time you log on.  There are plenty of people around that offer praise and even a couple of “Hallelujahs!” due to the ease and convenience of this program.  Again, this would be a case in which to ask yourself, "Did I ask for it?"


Anyone with a Mostofate toolbar probably didn't ask for it unless they were asking for a Trojan, too.  Mostofate is usually attached to a Trojan as a piece of adware along with a lot of other malware.  They redesigned the Softofate software program to include browser hijacking, advertisement pop-ups, and data mining.


Some adware flies under the radar as a tracking cookie.  Tracking cookies are marketing tools that were originally designed to make a website more visible and user friendly.  By accumulating data of surfing habits, advertisers can gear their campaign to fit our needs.  A tracking cookie crosses the line into spyware when it is constantly tracking your information private information.


With Mostofate, be assured that it is definitely spyware.  There is no known way that this could be considered useful.  It constantly runs in the back of your computer every time you start up Windows.  The advertisements are not friendly.  In fact, expect the pop-ups to override any block that you had previously.  At times, the pop-ups will come every other minute.  Anti-virus and anti-spyware programs can be disabled by this toolbar.  These are all tactics to have better access to all of your information.


What they do with the information is not known.  I can give you a couple well-educated guesses.  The purpose of the toolbar may include anything such as exploitation of all your private information, identity theft, and credit card fraud.  The origins of Mostofate are debatable.  It may be out of the United Kingdom or the Russian Federation.  For some reason, no one wants to take credit for this genius manipulation of a legitimate toolbar program.


Removal of the toolbar is complex.  Your best bet is to find a reputable anti-spyware company that uses state-of-the-art technology to keep up on all the latest trends in spyware.

About the Author:

Carl runs a site devoted to helping you rid your computer from all sorts of spyware and malware at http://www.spyzooka.com/

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Your Pc's Fate in the Hands of Mostofate

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