No, you're not the only one. I got them too, in Firefox and in Safari.
After looking at Show Certificate > Details, I learned that they were fake, and therefore, probably malicious. I finally got rid of them by looking at the cookies in each browser and nuking anything with "twit" in them. Haven't seen the pop-ups again.
Chris Cox wrote:
My guess is that you picked up a malicisous script on another site.
How might I look for or clear a malicious script?
I cleared my cookies again this time on my MacPro (they returned after doing this on my Powerbook, it goes everywhere, but my Mac Pro is strictly business) I will watch it more closely for pattern.
I can't recall if I get them in Firefox (I have cookies disabled), but definitely in Safari 4.1.3...
gator soup,
Knocking on wood…
I think I have managed to stop it in its tracks:
Next time you see that annoying pop-up in Safari, click on "Show Certificate" and navigate the second drop-down to the setting that says When Using this Certificate > set it to "Never Trust".
I haven't seen it since.
Knock on wood.
According to "Ian Chan" on that link,
"platform.twitter.com is where we host widgets for other websites. if you are visiting a website that has a tweet button or follow button, you will fetch resources from that url. there shouldn't be any certificate errors though"
In fact, since there is a little bird icon on the page, Adobe's implementation of this forum package is indirectly requesting "widgets" to run on our systems from platform.twitter.com.
They actually load quite a bit of stuff from other sites...
Adobe needs to disconnect themselves from this social networking horse manure.
I came to Adobe.com to interact as a professional in professional forums, and Twitter has NOTHING to do with that.
Thanks for bringing this subject up, guys. It alerted me to these additions to the forum pages, and allowed me to restrict a number of sites from running scripts on my system, which has the effect of speeding up the forum a little. But I really shouldn't have to be going through my network traces trying to ferret out sites I don't want Adobe causing to deliver junkware into my computer and adding them to my Restricted Sites list.
-Noel
As I pointed out, it's because Adobe has used Twitter's little bird icon on the page. It's not just a graphic; it pulls in software (Javascript) from Twitter's web site.
You're on a Mac, right? It may be that whatever process updates the list of root certification authorities on your system needs running. I don't know how you do that on a Mac - Windows Update takes care of it on the PC.
Maybe I'm just dreaming, but having instructed Internet Explorer not to trust any of those social networking sites (and thus not to allow their scripts to even try to run), I think pages here are coming up a little faster. ![]()
-Noel
Perhaps the nastiest contributor to this mess in the Adobe forums is a thing called "addthis.com". They are the culprit in this twitter fiasco.
From their site:
We don't install any tracking software on your computer.
The only time AddThis has access to any browsing data is when you visit a website that uses AddThis.
They have an "opt-out" procedure that I'm not willing to trust, as it works by putting yet another cookie on your computer:
station_one wrote:
They have an "opt-out" procedure that I'm not willing to trust, as it works by putting yet another cookie on your computer
I'm not a Mac expert, but is there no method for blocking or restricting the activity of specific domains?
On my Windows system just adding the addthis.com domain to my Restricted Sites list caused it not to be allowed to run any scripts, so that cuts them off at the door - no need to trust them for anything. Seems like there must be a way to do something similar on a Mac.
-Noel
Update:
Last night I installed the "Ghostery" add-on in Firefox. Right off the bat, it found six different sites running scripts off of every Adobe forum page—so I've blocked them:
Additionally, I installed the "BetterPrivacy" add-on which blocks and removes Flash-based cookies. Life just got a tiny notch better. ![]()
Firefox add-ons alone would be sufficient reason for me to abandon Slowfari.
On the other hand, Slowfari is real good about tattle-telling on things like this scripts I don't know much about.
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