Unwanted "Stop Sopa" banner on my blog
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An unwanted banner — “kz.am Stop SOPA” — has appeared on my website (http://staplessoccer.wordpress.com). I never clicked on the “Stop Sopa” widget offered by WordPress; I double-checked it, it’s unclicked. Who did this, where did it come from, and how can I get rid of it? THANKS!
The blog I need help with is: (visible only to logged in users)
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I’m not seeing any banner, but my anti-virus software just blocked a potentially malicious site after clicking on your site link. ?!
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And sorry if this is overly obvious, but is there any chance you added the banner from this thread and forgot about it?
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No — I did not add anything. Does your reply mean that your anti-virus software blocked my site entirely? That’s not good!
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You gave added a “NEXT GAME” code in a text widget. The original image URL redirects to the image you’re seeing now. You can go to Appearance > Widgets, open that text widget and delete the image code.
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The “NEXT GAME” code was always there. I did not change it, but suddenly the “Stop SOPA” image appeared.
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As noted above – the site you are getting the image from changed the image on their end. You need to remove the link to the imae.
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Was there an image there before?
it looks like the image file now redirects to the that stop SOPA image.
Many widgets do this… its not necessarily malicious… its done by host server of the file.You can either remove the
<img height="49" border="0" width="230" src="http://littleyapper.com/staplesblogpics/next-game.gif"/>
from the widget
or the whole text widget for now.as Panos suggested.
Just copy and save the whole code from text widget to a notepad, and you can put it back up later, if the images is changed back.
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Actually…. the origional domain has of the file has expired. It redirects very suspiciously…
I would follow the suggestion in this thread, remove the image code and move on. -
Thanks, all. It worked. Now my question is: Who put that code there, and how were they able to do it?!
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And no more pop up warnings from the anti-virus software, so that apparently was the source of the dodgy link.
Oh the perils of hotlinking!
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@dwoog
The code was not changed at your wordpress.com blog, your account is safe.Someone change the code of the image file at the origional site.”littleyapper . com” that you were “hotlinked ” to.
Oddly that site: littleyapper.com domain is expired, that would make me suspicious of that new redirected image.
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Once again: nobody changed the code in your widget. The code included this URL:
http://littleyapper.com/staplesblogpics/next-game.gif
If you click on it, you’ll see that it’s now redirecting to a different URL. -
You are hotlinking to someone else’s image. It is their image. They can change it whenever they want. I’ve done that with people who have taken one of my images and posted it on their site without my permission, and the images I’ve put up in some cases are rather shocking.
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To avoid losing control of the images on your site, host the images on your site. Upload them to your own site and then you know they’re safe. What hotlinking does is it installs a window that looks out onto the other site’s view. They can do some landscaping and change that view, and you get results like this.
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but this wasn’t an image — it was a text widget!
No one’s disputing the fact that it’s a text widget.
Take a break, then read dlager’s response and panaghiotisadam’s reply. As far as I know, they are referring to an image. An image in a text widget, but an image nevertheless.
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This http://littleyapper.com/staplesblogpics/next-game.gif is an image referenced in that text widget.
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