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[microsoft.com...]
Special information for GIANT AntiSpyware users
Current GIANT AntiSpyware users with active subscriptions are advised to continue to use their existing software until those subscriptions end.
I wonder if this means MicroSoft bought the anti-spyware activities of the GIANT company?
Seems funny for the makers of IE to be marketing an anti-spyware product . . . I always thought they liked the stuff! ;) Perhaps this means the talk of spyware as a reason to switch to FireFox is beginning to cause alarm in Redmond?
I wonder if this means MicroSoft bought the anti-spyware activities of the GIANT company?
They did several months back. The differences (I haven't tested either) apparently boil down to the fact that the MS version does not delete cookies - which is good news for affiliate marketing, especially if this program becomes the default tool for dealing with malware.
With this anti-spyware product (which I understand will not be free but probably subscription-based), it appears that if you create a chronically insecure operating system, charge through the nose for it, then you can also charge for anti-virus and anti-spyware "solutions" which clean up after the fact.
I think I'll stop there: must.. not... violate... the... TOS... ;)
I would have to ponder a subscription for this but I'll keep it for now.
This download is available to customers running genuine Microsoft Windows. Please click Continue to begin Windows validation.
Oh that is grand microsoft style.
So viruses and trojans will continue to be spread by non-verified copies of windows - ie. those in the majority not willing to give over their privacy rights to microsoft.
[later]
Well, actually it isn't. The tool (I just installed it) has an archery-target as icon. In the reduced image though it looked pretty much like the Firefox icon :-)
P.S. Not bad - found 3 things Spybot S&D didn't find.
And yes, I too appreciate the irony of the world's largest enabler of spyware releasing a paid antispyware product. (well, the beta is free, but the app will be paid)
haven't seen anything more than speculation about this. Has this been announced?
Microsoft has said they "may" charge. Nearly every tech analyst expects them to charge a cost to be competitive with McAfee and Symantec's antispyware products. The license to use the beta expires on July 31 or when the commercial version is released. I can pretty much guarantee you that they'll be charging about 75-90% of what McAfee and Symantec's products cost.
I went ahead and turned on the real-time protection, and wouldn't you know it the first (and only) thing it found was the following:
Microsoft AntiSpyware has detected that the Window's Messenger Service is currently running . . . this service has been a wide source for pop-up message spam . . .
Another bit of irony: this program has a feature for "Browser Hijack Restore." Let's see, I've never had any problems with that, not since switching to FireFox! ;)
So every German computer user with an IQ below room temperature (i.e. regular readers of this "newspaper") will download and install it.
I can't yet decide whether this is a good thing or not.
But I'm sure Microsoft Germany is looking forward to the day this is going to be converted into a charged service.
Here is what I've found it does NOT give you the capacity to delete...much less tag as bad.
Avenue A
mediaplex
doubleclick
servedbyadvertising
hitbox
and a few others I can't recall at the moment.
Having said that, my confidence in AdAware far outdistances MS's spyware tool.
Oh, just for the record. I installed MS's spyware tool selecting all the "Recommended" options.