• On GameSpot: Wii Fit tells 10-year-old she's fat
April 30, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

An iPod arrives, with a virus

Posted by Ina Fried
  • Print

Last week, I got a sales pitch e-mail from Buy.com touting a recertified 4GB iPod Nano for $99. I lost my iPod Touch last December and one of my older iPods had just given up the ghost, so I decided to go for it.

The iPod came in just a couple of days--but as soon as I unwrapped it and connected it to my Mac at home I got an ominous alert from my usually quiet antivirus software. The iPod, it informed me, contained some virus known as AdobeR.exe.

As I dug into the problem, I learned something I probably should have realized before I ordered. The "recertified" iPod wasn't recertified by Apple, but instead through some third party.

Apple sells its own Apple-certified refurbished products via its Web site, with said devices also coming with a one-year warranty. A 4GB from Apple's site would have set me back $129 and come with a $15 iTunes card, while a new model would have cost $149. (So yes, perhaps the lesson is simply that Ina should be less of a skinflint.)

That said, as a customer, Buy.com treated me right, shipping out a brand new iPod and apologizing for the inconvenience.

That doesn't answer the question, however, of how the virus got on a supposedly "recertified iPod." I spoke Monday with Buy.com's VP of operations, Fred Martin, who promised to contact the Illinois company that supplies Buy.com with the refurbished iPods.

My usually dormant Mac antivirus software sprang to life when I tried to connect the refurbished iPod Nano I bought from Buy.com

(Credit: CNET News.com)

On Tuesday, he reported back to me to say that after checking with the company, it did not appear that the problem was widespread.

"Our opinion is that this is not a significant problem that is happening with any frequency at all," Martin said. Martin noted that the company does wipe off any user data from the iPods it ships out as recertified. That process might involve a PC or Mac that could theoretically be infected with a virus, though I don't know that to be the case for sure.

Apple itself had a problem with a Windows virus getting on to some new iPods back in October 2006. It said it traced the problem to a single infected Windows machine used at a contract manufacturer.

The company said it had put steps in place to make sure this wouldn't happen again. To my knowledge, it hasn't happened since then.

Nor is the issue limited to iPods. Best Buy had an issue earlier this year where it was forced to warn customers that some of its Insignia photo frames shipped with a virus.

Has anyone else ordered a refurbished iPod from someone other than Apple and gotten more than they bargained for?

During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft. E-mail Ina.
Recent posts from Beyond Binary
Microsoft, labels try to revive subscriptions
Yahoo search exec departs, perhaps to Microsoft
Ballmer: 'We are done' with Yahoo acquisition idea
Microsoft hiring could be slow through 2010
'Moonlight' heads to beta
advertisement
Click Here

In the news now

New Internet gets outer-space tryout

NASA is using a comet-watching spacecraft to test new interplanetary networking protocols. The concepts are also being applied to flaky networks back home.



What CEO skills should Yahoo look for?

With Yahoo looking beyond Jerry Yang for a new CEO, Microsoft could be open to a mutually beneficial search deal.



About Beyond Binary

During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft.


Beyond Binary is a look at how technology is changing our lives and the people behind all that life-changing stuff, with an extra emphasis on that which emanates from Redmond, Wash.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Beyond Binary topics

Binary Bits

    Follow Ina on Twitter (Twitter name: InaFried)

    Featured blogs

    advertisement
    advertisement

    Inside CNET News

    Scroll Left Scroll Right