Ed Form wrote:
>
> Nobody but geeks use a decent browser. get real. The world
> uses MSIE and that's what we have to deal with. The standard
> settings in IE are wide open to malicious and clandestine
> entry.
If you buy a Yugo because it's the closest dealership, is it their fault when your car turns out to be a piece of junk? I'm sorry, but I don't have much sympathy for people who can get a perfectly good alternative but continue to use crappy software. It should be interesting when AOL drops IE and the marketshare completely reverses...
> I removed 101 hostile objects including 15 r4egistry entries
> from one of my clients workstations yesterday. When I went
> back this morning three were 15 more. After I removed them
> there was 1 more inside the hour.
Perhaps you should fix the problems (tweak the security settings, install patches, etc.) instead of just trying to clean up the results. Even with IE and OE at work, I've never gotten any of this stuff.
http://camtech2000.com/Pages/Restrictions.htm has an IE-policy editor. It's designed for restricting user access, but you can also have the user use it to make sure hostile pages don't change their settings and stuff.
> Yes it can. It is the direct equivalent of a virus spread to
> many people from a single infected carrier. The dissemination
> of these programs is invasion of privacy, deliberately
> intended to steal and make use of information private to the
> PC user, or to present to him things that he did not ask for
> and, in many cases, would *never* ask for. The *vast*
> majority of the adverts delivered by these programs are for
> porn. Some of them exceedingly graphic in nature. In the case
> of the client whose problem I have been dealing with, several
> of the adverts were for paedophile sites and contained very
> explicit pictures of things which are seriously illegal in
> this country and in every western nation.The UK police have a
> website specifically set up to allow these matters to be
> reported. The list of 'don't bother to report these, we know
I have seen very few actual "spy" programs. Most of them are simply annoying ads for some site. Just because a large number of people (myself included) wish it would cease to exist, doesn't mean that everyone does. It seems impossible, but there are people who like those things. If it's something illegal that's a totally different issue...
> Your next comment...
>
> > When you start doing that, you get censorship based on
> whatever the guy
> > writing it decides he doesn't like. That was an issue with
> the netfilters a
> > while back. They would block out competitors' perfectly
> legitimate sites
> > and ones that pointed out flaws in their own software and
> stuff like that.
>
> ...is almost astonishingly naive.
Sorry, I feel that I should be able to choose what I do and don't want to see. I don't want my decisions made by some guy in some random office somewhere. Even the biggest names have shown that they're biased...
> A colleague of mine visited an 85 year old lady about 10 days
> ago - he does general computer repairs, maintenance and
> setup. She asked him to call because she was being bombarded
> with appalling porn. He found that she had receive 820
> messages of this type in the previous 7 days. She now has a
> new email account and carefully installed Lavasoft Ad Aware
> to make sure the problem does not reoccur.
My guess is that she used her email address on some form and didn't read the fine print to go along with it. I have an alias set up for my domain name registration that has never been used for anything else, and that's where a lot of my spam comes from, so I do know that there are people out there harvesting addresses and stuff. But for the most part, I find that the initial problem comes from people not paying attention to what they're doing.
> > Also, many people prefer Spybot Search & Destroy over
> Ad-Aware.
> >
http://security.kolla.de/ A while back, Lavasoft
> completely stopped
> > working on v5.x to focus on v6. This meant no updates for a
> long
> > time, which gave people a false sense of security. Also,
> the default
> > install plus the standard "Check for updates" will find
> more malware
> > in Spybot S&D than in Ad-Aware.
>
> Ad Aware version 6 is now available and, in my newly-hardened
> opinion, should be legally required to be delivered
> pre-configured with every PC!!!!!
As I said, Spybot will catch more than Ad-Aware (even v6), and the author states openly that he's dedicated to the idea of free software, which is always a bonus. I believe it's updated more often too, which can be done from right in the program.
Also, yesterday's Lockergnome (
http://www.lockergnome.com/issues/daily/20030417.html) has an article about using the moderation features of a Yahoo Group to allow you to receive only messages from real people, by forcing them to take action for you to receive the mail.
http://www.schooner.com/~loverso/no-ads/ is the best web filter I've used yet. It uses Javascript and the browsers' dynamic proxying features to allow or "blackhole" requests based on the URL. For example, I can see "http://www.e-smith.org/forums/", but "http://www.e-smith.org/ads/" is blocked. It's quite rare that I even see a banner ad now. It works in email as well, stopping those annoying image spams.