mysngoeshere56 (post: 1480029) wrote:I think I get what you might be saying, but I'm a little confused... Is there a video tutorial about this you can find for me? Seeing it visually might help me wrap my mind around it a little more (I'm a kinesthetic/visual person).
I've decided that's probably not the problem anyway, given that other people seem to have the problem with the same exact string, and that people have had the problem on other browsers as well. And it's probably not malware on your computer either. After a bit of investigating, it appears this might be an issue with the Amazon website, not with your browser. Is it on Amazon that this happens to you?
See here:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/forum/cd/discussion.html?ie=UTF8&cdForum=Fx20DX5GEB7TUX8&cdThread=Tx3L7TDUVJEN7WYEven if it's not on Amazon, it's seems likely that it's a cross-site scripting attack (where someone outside the page you're viewing injects Javascript into the page). And while XSS attacks can hijack your browser, it is unlikely to affect your computer directly. The only way to prevent them on a browser level is to install the NoScript Firefox Extension, which disables Javascript except on pages you trust, and also has extra anti-XSS protection.
If it isn't happening anymore, it's likely that Amazon quietly fixed the problem on their site. However, if it happened to you on an Amazon page where you input your Amazon password or credit card info, you may want to monitor your card account closely for unexpected changes, and change your Amazon password (after the problem is resolved or prevented). It is unlikely anyone could have gone so far as to steal your info, but it is possible. If they were out to get your info, they messed up by letting you notice something was wrong, so it's likely they failed, but it's best to be careful.