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Which anti-spyware softwear?

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Dave {鹂饈

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Jul 8, 2007, 6:27:54 AM7/8/07
to
With so many different anti-spyware programs to chose from it's difficult to
know which are the best to install. Is there a comparison site that looks at
what is available and compares their performance to each other? If not,
what is the best to install on a PC running Windows XP?

Thanks,
Dave


Message has been deleted

Gerald309

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Jul 8, 2007, 11:30:35 AM7/8/07
to
This article gives you the exact information :

The Top Three
http://bluecollarpc.net/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=228

There are more here - actual professional reviews - *not* user reviews
sometimes called "newbie press hype"....

Software Reviews
http://bluecollarpc.net/phpbb2/viewforum.php?f=4
Administrators, Advanced Members, Professional and Expert Reviews.

Since you are shopping you definately should check things here:

"Very Important Message about anti-spyware software: "
http://www.bluecollarpc.net/pcsafety.html
"It is very sad to mention that this sector of Computing Security is a
jungle. Not like others, anti-virus or firewalls. There are many bad
or fake anti-spyware softwares out here that actually hi-jack your web
browsers for one to try to force purchase to get your PC back. This is
a must website to view before purchasing any anti-spyware software !
Note that there are legal liabilities for professionals in reporting
bad software and this is a compliant website and very known at forums
and groups: "

Title: The Spyware Warrior List of Rogue/Suspect Anti-Spyware Products
& Web Sites
Description: Bad, False, Fake products
URL: http://www.spywarewarrior.com/rogue_anti-spyware.htm

Forums Owner
BlueCollarPC.Net Forums

Cyberiade.it Anonymous Remailer

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Jul 8, 2007, 1:36:21 PM7/8/07
to

This list is a bit out of date, last checked January 2007, but these
are either completely all freeware, or freeware with commercial upgrade
options.

The main thing is to keep everything on your computer up to date, and
beware of any suspicious links, or any offers to "install" software that
you don't know for sure isn't spy ware, ad ware or virus ware. That
includes suspicious "toolbars." That's why I like the mvps host file so
much, because it prevents bad commercial links like "doubleclick" from
downloading onto your computer:

Free anti virus AVG (version 7.5):
http://free.grisoft.com/doc/5390/lng/us/tpl/v5

Free anti spyware, etc.:
http://www.ccleaner.com
http://www.spybot.info/en/download/
http://www.javacoolsoftware.com/spywareblaster.html
http://www.winpatrol.com/download.html
http://www.superantispyware.com/downloadfile.html?productid=SUPERANTISPYWAREFREE
http://www.spywarewarrior.com/uiuc/res/ie-spyad.zip
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.zip
http://www.funkytoad.com/hoster.htm
http://www.lavasoft.de/software/adaware/
http://www.spywarewarrior.com/uiuc/resource.htm
http://www.siteadvisor.com/download/ie.html

Free news readers:
http://www.40tude.com/dialog/
http://xnews.newsguy.com/

Free news filters:
http://www.nfilter.org/
http://www.arcorhome.de/newshamster/tgl/misc/hamster_de.html

Free public news servers:
http://www.newzbot.com/

Han

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Jul 8, 2007, 2:08:27 PM7/8/07
to
"Dave {鹂饈" <dave@blueyonder--virginmedia_no_address_to_spam.co.uk>
wrote in news:K_2ki.20158$p8.1...@text.news.blueyonder.co.uk:

I use SUPERAntispsyware now. Used others before. Generally have had no
problems, except some cookies. Those are very bad if youre paraniod, but,
then, I also walk across Manhattan and work in the VA Hospital <grin>.


--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid

Vanguard

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Jul 8, 2007, 3:48:00 PM7/8/07
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"Gerald309" wrote in message
news:1183908635.2...@n2g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

This article gives you the exact information :

<snip>


--- REPLY SEPARATOR ---
Only required because Gerald posts in Usenet using quoted-printable
format (not recommended).

Voting lists are worthless for guaging the effectiveness of an
anti-malware product. Each user that votes has limited experience due
to the limited number of attacks he/she receives. Saying that you've
never been hit with malware because you use a particular product says
absolutely nothing about the coverage of that product.


Vanguard

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Jul 8, 2007, 4:30:13 PM7/8/07
to
"Dave" wrote in message
news:K_2ki.20158$p8.1...@text.news.blueyonder.co.uk...


How much have you allocated to a budget to purchase anti-malware
products? You did not specify if all solutions must be free or if some
or all can be commercialware.

If you're willing to pay for the protection, take a look at PrevX (used
to have a free "research" version but no longer). If you're looking for
freebies only:

- Grisoft's AVG: anti-virus, free.
- Grisoft's anti-rootkit: free. I also have the rootkit revealer from
SysInternals (bought by Microsoft).
- ewido used to be free but not after Grisoft bought them. After the
30-day trial, it cripples itself into the free version; however, if the
free version merely eliminates the on-access background scanner and
degrades the product into a manual (on-demand) scanner, it's still of
value (I wouldn't want yet another on-access scanner, anyway).
- Windows Defender. It's major defect is that it polls for changes
(i.e., it is reactive and often late). It reports a change after the
process made it so what it does is an undo. The same deficiency exists
with WinPatrol. Prevx is proactive in that it forces a pend on an
unauthorized change until you allow it or allowed it before.
- DiamondCS ProcessGuard. Programs can only run if they can get into
real memory, and this regulates what can run. Even useful to restrict
non-malware, like Microsoft's WGA that runs on Windows startup (although
you still get stuck with their AX control for WGA at Windows Update).
- VMware Server or Virtual PC (VPC). Proves a virtual machine where you
can browse or trial apps without them touching your host OS. VMware is
better, especially since it gives you snapshots to revert the VM back to
a prior known base state.
- Sandboxie. Runs a local VM under the host OS so is less secure than
VMware or VPC but still affords pretty good protections, like wiping AX
controls downloading during a browser session. Can be used to sandbox
browsers or any other app. After 30-day trial, product remains fully
functional but issues bitch reminders to prod you into buying it.
- Commodo (firewall only). Would've probably stayed with Sygate except
Symantec killed it (but I still do have a copy of Sygate Pro around).
- Ad-Aware. Paid version includes their Ad-watch on-access background
scanner. I wouldn't want yet another scanner, anyway, so no loss to me
that the free version doesn't have it. I use this only as an on-demand
scanner.
- Spybot S&D. Don't bother with their TeaTimer which is a poor
imitation of an IPS (intrustion protection system). Prevx is far better
(but not free). I use Spybot S&D only as an on-demand scanner.
- SpywareBlaster. I use it only for the ActiveX killbits added to the
registry for known malware and the site block list. I don't bother with
blocking cookies since I use a cookie manager to whitelist which ones
that I'll keep and all others are forced to be per-session cookies (they
get deleted upon exiting the browser). This is an on-demand program
only; i.e., there is nothing resident that continues to run so
periodically you have to manually run it.

All of the above is my personal opinion based on my limited experience
as a signle user of these products. While there are sites for
comparison of anti-virus products, like http://www.av-comparatives.org/,
I haven't found a similar technically investigative site regarding other
anti-malware products. Although I use all of the above, I don't have
them all running at the same time. I actually want to use my computer,
not wade through all the security on it. Protection requires a layered
approach. Just don't get so paranoid that you cripple your hardware by
running an excessive number of anti-malware products.

Gaz

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Jul 8, 2007, 5:36:12 PM7/8/07
to

Be careful, there are about twenty programmes out there which are excellent,
and about 200 which will infect your machine and cause more problems then
you could imagine.

Two general anti spyware programmes that i have used and find excellent:
superantispyware
and
avg antispyware

It is rare for either of them to miss things...

Gaz


Gladiator

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Jul 8, 2007, 10:09:16 PM7/8/07
to
On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 08:30:35 -0700, Gerald309 <gera...@gmail.com>
wrote:

>This article gives you the exact information :
>
>The Top Three
>http://bluecollarpc.net/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=228
>
>There are more here - actual professional reviews - *not* user reviews
>sometimes called "newbie press hype"....

One post on a web forum and I am supposed to take that seriously? I
don't pay for anti-spyware software and I never get bit in the ass.
Here's what I use and it's all free.

MVPS Hosts File
Spywareblaster
Spybot S&D
Super Anti Spyware
Lavasoft Adaware
A-Squared
AVG
Firefox with noscripts plugin

Do all that and you won't get bit either.

Gladiator

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Jul 8, 2007, 10:14:09 PM7/8/07
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On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 18:08:27 GMT, Han <nob...@nospam.not> wrote:


>I use SUPERAntispsyware now. Used others before. Generally have had no
>problems, except some cookies. Those are very bad if youre paraniod, but,
>then, I also walk across Manhattan and work in the VA Hospital <grin>.

How are cookies very bad? A cookie can't do anything to your PC and
they can't even track you across mulitple websites. They can only
track you from within the website they were loaded from. When you see
any anti-spyware software warn you about tracking cookies just let it
delete them but they are nothing to be concerend about as the
anti-spyware software developers would have you believe. A little
paranoia is a good thing but don't let it send you over the edge.

Gladiator

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Jul 8, 2007, 10:17:17 PM7/8/07
to
On Sun, 8 Jul 2007 15:30:13 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid> wrote:


>All of the above is my personal opinion based on my limited experience
>as a signle user of these products. While there are sites for
>comparison of anti-virus products, like http://www.av-comparatives.org/,
>I haven't found a similar technically investigative site regarding other
>anti-malware products. Although I use all of the above, I don't have
>them all running at the same time. I actually want to use my computer,
>not wade through all the security on it. Protection requires a layered
>approach. Just don't get so paranoid that you cripple your hardware by
>running an excessive number of anti-malware products.

Yea, on my XP PC I have no protection running in the background. On
Vista I have AVG and Defender running in the background but have a
.bat file to shut all that crap down when I want to game.

Vanguard

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Jul 8, 2007, 10:42:25 PM7/8/07
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"Gladiator" <n...@email.invalid> wrote in message
news:u963939484jroedoj...@4ax.com...


Yet these same folks that are paranoid about tracking cookies forget
that clicking on all those links to navigate to different pages means
the source site can add info to the URL that the target site can use for
tracking, and of course the user isn't changing their IP address during
that navigation.

The smartest approach to cookies is to whitelist them. You keep a
whitelist of good cookie sites and all the rest are deleted (not
blocked) when you exit the browser. Block 3rd party cookies (those
where the source site writes a cookie that it can't use but has another
domain specified within the cookie so that other domain can read that
cookie and see it was written by the source site). After that, all
non-whitelisted cookies get forced to be per-session cookies which get
purged when the browser exits. I don't recommend blocking cookies if
whitelisting is used because too many sites need them for proper
operation of that site.

There are plenty of cookie managers that include whitelisting, some of
which are free. I happen to get cookie whitelisting in my popup blocker
(PopUpCop, not free).

Vanguard

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Jul 9, 2007, 12:05:52 AM7/9/07
to
"Gladiator" wrote in message
news:au5393hr86o0m3a8a...@4ax.com...

> Here's what I use and it's all free.
>
> MVPS Hosts File

> ...

I never use a hosts file where it redirects "bad" hostnames to the
localhost (which presumably isn't running a web server). Why? Because
it is far too easy to create placeholder hostnames at a domain that
change at-will so the hosts file will never be up to date. The MVPs
hosts file has around 52 entries just for DoubleClick when I checked a
couple months ago. That's ridiculous. Many of these spam sites are now
accepting ANY hostname at their domain so a hosts list would have to be
infinite in size (okay, not infinite but extremely huge) to encompass
every possible hostname at that domain. Rather than their DNS server
rejecting the lookup on a hostname, they simply return the IP address
for their boundary server host for all DNS requests.

A hosts file demands a fully qualified name (FQDN) for the host, like
www.domain.com or a1bfd.otherdomain.com. You cannot use wildcarding or
just specify the domain to redirect (to localhost) all connects to that
domain. A few firewalls permit wildcarding in the URL filtering. Much
easier to filter on "/*.doubleclick.*/" than on 52 different and unique
entries in a hosts file which has to be periodically updated to account
for Doubleclick adding yet another hostname.

Another problem with a hosts file is that the site to which you connect
but are trying to block their ads from these "bad" site can see that you
blocked those ads. Because the HTML code you get contains the URL to
the advertiser's site, your browser is expected to go retrieve the
content at that URL. The site you visit knows your IP address. The ad
server also knows your IP address *if* you retrieve their content. If
the web site you visit and the ad site don't see that your IP address
accesses both pages within a short interval, like a few seconds, the
visited site doesn't get an acknowledgement from the ad server showing
your IP address visited there. The visited site then refuses to show
you its content because you blocked the ads.

To be fair, it is THEIR site, not yours, and the cost of your visit and
everyone else's to allow free access to that site may rely on ad revenue
(i.e., ad space or click-throughs). Don't visit there if you don't like
seeing advertisements. Just as you believe you have a right to edit the
content of their site, they have the right to not show you that content
unless you see ALL of it. They can even screw up the formatting of
their page to make it difficult to read unless the ads are displayed in
your browser (i.e., the space for the ad is different than for the
placeholder). Blocking their ads can result in a non-sustainable web
site that disappears because of users like yourself. Not going there
eliminates their cost in resources to supply you with their web page.
It is very much like going to the store to buy a box of chocolates,
opening the box while in the store, tossing out all the ones that you
don't like, and then claiming you should only have to pay only for the
ones that you left in the box.

Han

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Jul 9, 2007, 6:42:36 AM7/9/07
to
Gladiator <n...@email.invalid> wrote in
news:u963939484jroedoj...@4ax.com:

> On Sun, 08 Jul 2007 18:08:27 GMT, Han <nob...@nospam.not> wrote:
>
>
>>I use SUPERAntispsyware now. Used others before. Generally have had
>>no problems, except some cookies. Those are very bad if youre
>>paraniod, but, then, I also walk across Manhattan and work in the VA
>>Hospital <grin>.
>
> How are cookies very bad?


Sorry, I had forgotten to show that "SARCASM" was turned on. I agree
completely.

> A cookie can't do anything to your PC and
> they can't even track you across mulitple websites. They can only
> track you from within the website they were loaded from. When you see
> any anti-spyware software warn you about tracking cookies just let it
> delete them but they are nothing to be concerend about as the
> anti-spyware software developers would have you believe. A little
> paranoia is a good thing but don't let it send you over the edge.

--

Ron Lopshire

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Jul 9, 2007, 9:48:30 AM7/9/07
to

Start here, Dave.

http://spywarewarrior.com/

You can end there, also. When people agree on what constitutes spyware
and adware, you might find some worthwhile comparison (not review, poll,
or any other similar nonsense). Until then (that would be when Hell
freezes over), such a thing is not possible.

Start with these.

http://www.spywarewarrior.com/rogue_anti-spyware.htm#trustworthy

Many are or have a freeware offering which can be upgraded to a Pro
Version (automatic updates, real-time protection, scheduled scanning,
priority support, etc.). I currently have a license for SAS which offers
a 30-day free evaluation of SAS Pro.

I do not agree with Eric WRT Windows Defender being trustworthy. Windows
Defender will _not_ protect you from Microsoft, MSN or anyone else with
whom Microsoft has partnered.

http://preview.tinyurl.com/2ptclh

Letting MS protect you from adware is tantamount to letting
Google-Doubleclick protect you from adware. I myself would rather have
CoolWebSearch on my system. At least I know what CWS is up to, and I
know how to get rid of it. Of course, just my 0.02. YMMV.

If you want to test an anti-spyware app for typical responses to various
types of threats, you can play with these.

http://www.spycar.org

Note that these /tests/ are along the lines of Eicar. They mean nothing
WRT one anti-spyware app's efficacy against malware compared to another
app. The important thing is to stay away from these and all like them.

http://www.spywarewarrior.com/rogue_anti-spyware.htm#sites

And stay away from _any_ security application where the Pro (paid)
Version offers better protection and/or detection than the
freeware/shareware version. That would be a scam.

Ron :)

Dave {鹂饈

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Jul 9, 2007, 2:43:44 PM7/9/07
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"Dave {鹂饈" <dave@blueyonder--virginmedia_no_address_to_spam.co.uk> wrote
in message news:K_2ki.20158$p8.1...@text.news.blueyonder.co.uk...

Thanks for all the advice and pointers to software and websites.

Dave


Gerald309

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Jul 9, 2007, 3:42:56 PM7/9/07
to
Vanguard the idiot writes about Gerald309 Posts...
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.privacy.spyware/browse_thread/thread/1354ddb642b4f006?hl=en

MY REPLIES - IN FULL BELOW TOO....

1) ""Voting lists are worthless for guaging the effectiveness of an
anti-malware product. "" WRONG
1) Number one how can consumers be wrong ? If something does not work
and we know and say so - who cares what excuses people like you give
when the product has stopped selling. What was your point ?
2) ""Each user that votes has limited experience due
2) Number two - EVEN YOU will admit this is the most prejudicial
statement the world has ever heard since Adolph Hitler introduced the
"Final Solution" - the absolution and genocide of the Hebrew Race at
will. You are that disgusting by calling everyone this - STUPID. Just
who the hell are you anyway ? You my friend need an attitude
adjustment I wish I could provide in person.
to the limited number of attacks he/she receives."" WRONG OBVIOUSLY
3) ""Saying that you've never been hit with malware because you use a
particular product says
absolutely nothing about the coverage of that product. "" WRONG -
IDIOT...
3) Statistics have chronically for over 48 months declared that 90
percent or more of world computers are infected with malware - meaning
also adware and spyware. This year the reports and warnings concerning
all legitimate websites have hit the wires lkike a Christmas Tree....
and by the way we did have a contest to "Name the Rock Vanguard
Crawled Out From Under". THESE FACTS MY FRIEND ARE FROM THE SECURITY
EXPERTS WORLDWIDE AND WORLD GOVERNMENT. This means - idiot - that AT
LEAST NINE OUT OF TEN PEOPLE are infected at any given time and the
OTHER PROTECTED PEOPLE SAYING THEY ARE NOT GETTING INFECTED BECAUSE OF
A PARTICULAR PRODUCT (LIKE THE "TOP THREE" I MENTIONED THAT PASS VB100
TOP TEST IN THE WORLD BY PROFESSIONALS AND EXPERTS) ARE EXACTLY AND
ENTIRELY CORRECT OBVIOUSLY AS THE TEN PERCENT THAT ALL EXPERTS AND
GOVERNEMENTS ARE SAYING ARE PROTECTED AND ARE QUITE CORRECT ACCORDING
TO ALL EXPERTS AND GOVERNMENTS OF THE WORLD..... NOW YOU JUST GOOSE-
STEP YOUR LITTLE TROLL SKINNY ASSES ON THE BIG-F- OUT OF HERE
TROLL !!!!!

THERE IS NO WAY OUT OF THIS --- TROLL !!!! THANK YOU HITLER FOR YOUR
WONDERFUL OPINIONS OF THE COMMUNITY OF COMPUTER USERS WORLD WIDE - - -
- YOUR OPINIONS ? NO NO THANKS, KEEP THEM FOR YOURSELF BECAUSE LIES
STAY WITH LIES - NOT THE TRUTH !!!! DON'T COME BACK !!!!

OH YEAH - - - ABOUT THIS::::>

""--- REPLY SEPARATOR ---
Only required because Gerald posts in Usenet using quoted-printable

format (not recommended). "": WRONG - I AM IN GOOGLE GROUPS NOT USENET
NEWS ROOMS LIKE THE OE CLIENT. TAKE THAT UP WITH GOOGLE GROUPS SERVICE
A-HOLE-STAR...

Obviously you do not understand "Consumer Tests" and the value of
them. We could take your stupidity along the lines of anyone
volunteering for "beta testing" and reporting bugs - or in the very
least what a user knows appears a very wrong occurrence with some
software - obviously. Does this make even an unskilled Intermediate
User or Novice a worthless opinion with absolutely no merit ??? What
is your problem ??? If you took a moment to fish around a bit at where
I live on the internet you might learn something. I used to speak like
you - out of turn. I learned fast to stop it on the world web - and
because I was, and am no more, a complete novie newbie. In security
this dicipline achieves the desired effect - a safe community - by
stopping the electronic pen from halting forward movement. This is not
an intellectually challenged nation of people or world. Over 4 billion
of us have figured out how to survive.

Why and what am I responding to ? You picked my post and called it
stupid. You did. There is no intellectual sweetness to hide that. You
called my post stupid because it included a public vote with the
others all in the Software Reviews section of my BlueCollarPC.Net
Forums I pay for out of my pocket to offer the Community a place to
share and learn pc security as volunteer Forums Host - and these
BlueCollarPC.Net Forums Polls are obviously in no way pretending to
conclude as fact anything - but quite the opposite as an obvious
intended broad public poll of public opinion that the general public
is well aware that any Internet Brat can purposely be a Vandal and
vote Deceptively intentionally - - - I mean we all know that just
looking at what you did obviously and is why we are all looking at you
right now trying to get out of this by telling lies in some manner
about you did not imply that and how can you derive that from that and
on and on and on. I felt it quite necessary to NOT let you go
unchecked calling my Community Efforts as stupid and / or with some
hidden intent. But very, very obviously these are broader GENERAL
PUBLIC OPINION POLLS to publically compare notes with Official
Reviews by Professionals and Experts conducted in the Securrity
Software Industry as to a BALLPARK FIGURE of what is TRUE and what IS
NOT.... Do You Get It Now ???? Maybe you are just stupid and like to
be a diarhea mouth and are constantly caught across the Net when you
do this - the age-old "leap without looking".

FULL MESSAGE YOU WON'T ERASE:
Vanguard View profile
"Gerald309" wrote in message

news:1183908635.2...@n2g2000hse.googlegroups.com...

More options Jul 8, 3:48 pm

Newsgroups: alt.privacy.spyware
From: "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid>
Date: Sun, 8 Jul 2007 14:48:00 -0500
Subject: Re: Which anti-spyware softwear?
Reply | Reply to author | Forward | Print | Individual message | Show
original | Report this message | Find messages by this author

cmsix

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Jul 9, 2007, 4:04:47 PM7/9/07
to

"Far Canal" <m...@privacy.net> wrote in message
news:MPG.20fae1be6...@news.readfreenews.net...
Dave {鹂饈 wrote


No such thing as *best*. None of them are 100% efficient. Prevention
is better than cure.
So ...
Stop using IE & OE.

I'll second replacing IE but Outlook Express can be made as safe as anything
else by adjusting a few setting. Such as:

Disable the preview pane.
Disable html rendering in messages.

cmsix

Keep away from wank sites.
Use an updated Hosts file.
Stop AciveX & scripting.
etc etc

cmsix

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Jul 9, 2007, 4:14:51 PM7/9/07
to

"Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid> wrote in message
news:DtWdnV19P4-KKQzb...@comcast.com...

It is possible for them to deny you a view of their site for not visiting
their adsite, but I've never seen it. If you look at sites that use double
click and others, you'll see that those ads arent the only ones on the page.
You'll also often see the unreachable content get a substitute add when the
download fails.

The sites want you to come by hosts file or not. If they didn't you couldn't
get to their site at all without accepting the add content.

cmsix

>


Gerald309

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Jul 9, 2007, 6:51:17 PM7/9/07
to
Now let's see if I can just enter my pre-emptive strike here to just
plainly shut this fool up before they reply over in the news room.

Now I have said or hinted that I believe this person is a complete
fraud posing as some white collar person of position in the computer
security filed - and is actually replying to public internet boards
established for this as one avenue of public help in the community.


Let's review his 3 basic statements:

1) Voting lists are worthless for guaging the effectiveness of an anti-
malware product

2) Each user that votes has limited experience due to the limited


number of attacks he/she receives

3) Saying that you've never been hit with malware because you use a


particular product says absolutely nothing about the coverage of that
product.


Okay let's say from the general feel of things - we walk into this
news room and here is this person saying this to this (actually my
post about security software).....

Okay, the substance of this person's comments actually feel
substantial and of great magnitude or as one having much gravity in
the field or implications as from a source of insider knowledge - - -
a person "talking down" to what was posted.... "talking down to" ....
"talking down to".... see it ?

Okay seeing that - you see this person in "talking down to" what was
posted that the person is establishing themselves as "above" whom they
are talking to. See it ?

Okay - simply what was said as far as computer securioty shows this
person is a complete buffoon - a circus clown - and I think everyone
does get that. But, let's take this directly to this person's
words....

You could call public user polls as completely weak in any real world
promotion of a security product - but are obviously not ruled out by
ANY security product available.... What do we always see when visiting
a security product website sale point - - - "Just listen to what Our
Customers say about our Product ! ? ... don't we... hmmm.... No I
would have to say they are very, very valued by ALL security products
and actually used as advertising the effectiveness of the product.

Okay, so this person moves on to "indict" the average user as of "low
intelligence and intellect" and embarrassingly says they have "no
experience" with spyware infection. Geez whizz... I hate to go through
with this repulsive troll but I will....

Okay, number one any quality antispyware program directly advertises
the "number of hits" blocked - actually informs the user right on the
front panel as to how many "attempts to infect" were blocked.... You
getting the same idea as me ? This fool has never even seen one
because it is a transient "living off the land for free". Sure... Mr.
Talk Down 'person of position' we should all listen into instead of
some fool with "worthless !!!" public polls at "BlueCollarPC.Net
Forums" !!!!

And the statement made was a blanket statement meaning "generally all
users at large" have limited experience - "due to the limited number
of attacks he/she receives" ..... Again, and anyone can see this right
now as true at Google, ALL SOURCES claim that up to or just over 90
Percent of ALL world computers are infected right now with malware
that includes spywares. So that the REALITY is the EXACT opposite of
what this "Mr. Talk Down BlueCollarPC.Net Forums Public Votes" says -
isn't it ? Is not the TRUTH that it is actually then that up to or
more then 9 Users out of 10 are encountering infections as we
speak ??? Or are ALL the experts liars ??? Well ??? Isn't the truth
then that almost everyone is encountering infection 24/7 ??? I mean
come on.... the person tried to slide across that the average life of
a computer user is "far and few between" encounters with infections,
malwares. That IS absurd - don't you think ?

This person makes me sick that they would pull a stunt like this and I
do indeed hope that some complete mass aggravation is being somewhat
quenched in this "smoked troll" (google it) outing.....

The point I would move onto is - okay let's say in the field you
weren't in security - you were in sales.... oh please !
_________________
*****Forum Moderator *****
BlueCollarPC.Net Forums Spyware Removal and Computing Safety
http://bluecollarpc.net/phpbb2/index.php

Vanguard

unread,
Jul 9, 2007, 11:25:32 PM7/9/07
to
"Gerald309" wrote in message
news:1184021477.0...@o61g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
> ... shut this fool up ...
> ... fraud posing as some white collar person of position in the
> computer
> security filed ...
> ... this person is a complete buffoon ...
> ... this repulsive troll ....
> ... This fool ...
> ... "Mr. Talk Down BlueCollarPC.Net Forums Public Votes" ...
> ... this "smoked troll" ..

Oh hurray, I think we've found another Alan Connor wannabe.
(http://www.pearlgates.net/nanae/kooks/ac/fga.shtml)

Maximus the Mad

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 12:51:47 AM7/10/07
to
Vanguard aka n...@mail.invalid on 7/9/2007 at 11:25:32 PM in
alt.privacy.spyware<uf2dnbU9X623YQ_b...@comcast.com> after
much thought,came up with this jewel:

Or a MVP wannabe??It could be PCBUTTS evil twin?????

max
--
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Change nomail.afraid.org to gmail.com to reply. nomail.afraid.org is
specifically setup for USENET.Feel free to use it yourself.
Always remember - only download files from Trusted Sites.
"VISTA" is an acronym for the top five Windows problems: Viruses,
Infections, Spyware, Trojans and Adware. -PanHandler
Registered Linux User #393236

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 12:58:52 AM7/10/07
to
On Sun, 8 Jul 2007 23:05:52 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid> wrote:


>To be fair, it is THEIR site, not yours, and the cost of your visit and
>everyone else's to allow free access to that site may rely on ad revenue
>(i.e., ad space or click-throughs). Don't visit there if you don't like
>seeing advertisements. Just as you believe you have a right to edit the
>content of their site, they have the right to not show you that content
>unless you see ALL of it. They can even screw up the formatting of
>their page to make it difficult to read unless the ads are displayed in
>your browser (i.e., the space for the ad is different than for the
>placeholder). Blocking their ads can result in a non-sustainable web
>site that disappears because of users like yourself. Not going there
>eliminates their cost in resources to supply you with their web page.
>It is very much like going to the store to buy a box of chocolates,
>opening the box while in the store, tossing out all the ones that you
>don't like, and then claiming you should only have to pay only for the
>ones that you left in the box.

It's my computer and I'll block anything I want.

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 1:02:57 AM7/10/07
to
On Sun, 8 Jul 2007 21:42:25 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid> wrote:


>
>Yet these same folks that are paranoid about tracking cookies forget
>that clicking on all those links to navigate to different pages means
>the source site can add info to the URL that the target site can use for
>tracking, and of course the user isn't changing their IP address during
>that navigation.
>
>The smartest approach to cookies is to whitelist them. You keep a
>whitelist of good cookie sites and all the rest are deleted (not
>blocked) when you exit the browser. Block 3rd party cookies (those
>where the source site writes a cookie that it can't use but has another
>domain specified within the cookie so that other domain can read that
>cookie and see it was written by the source site). After that, all
>non-whitelisted cookies get forced to be per-session cookies which get
>purged when the browser exits. I don't recommend blocking cookies if
>whitelisting is used because too many sites need them for proper
>operation of that site.
>
>There are plenty of cookie managers that include whitelisting, some of
>which are free. I happen to get cookie whitelisting in my popup blocker
>(PopUpCop, not free).

If your that worried about it then just go through a free proxy
server. Myself, I only use those to go to web forums I get banned
from. :)

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 1:03:46 AM7/10/07
to
On Mon, 09 Jul 2007 10:42:36 GMT, Han <nob...@nospam.not> wrote:


>Sorry, I had forgotten to show that "SARCASM" was turned on. I agree
>completely.

Ah, my humor detector was in off mode. Sorry. :)

Vanguard

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 3:44:15 AM7/10/07
to
"Gladiator" wrote in message
news:ve4693hc8t7nutvkr...@4ax.com...


It's their site so don't bitch when they decide not to let you see any
of it. Now I know why some of the books I get from the library have
torn out pages and polluted with highlighted lines.


Vanguard

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 3:55:02 AM7/10/07
to
"Gladiator" wrote in message
news:pj4693hg0upao8o17...@4ax.com...

>
> "Vanguard" wrote:
>>
>>The smartest approach to cookies is to whitelist them.
>
> If your that worried about it then just go through a free proxy
> server.

So I'm supposed to trust an unknown operator that runs a proxy server
hoping that they won't track me. I could chain the proxies hoping that
they aren't in collusion with each other. And, of course, I definitely
want to impact connection reliability and reduce speed along with losing
use of some protocols, like HTTPS. Last I remember, cookies are saved
on my host, not on the proxy. I'm not remote desktoping to their proxy
to run the browser from there. Javascript works quite nicely, if
enabled, to report your IP address.

I don't have to worry about cookies. I manage them rather than let them
clutter, and I only have to manage just a few for the domains that I
whitelist.

> Myself, I only use those to go to web forums I get banned
> from. :)

Which means that forums should blacklist the public proxies. There are
blacklists for those. You've been lucky so far that the forums don't
use them.

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 6:41:23 PM7/10/07
to
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 02:44:15 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid>
wrote:


>It's their site so don't bitch when they decide not to let you see any
>of it. Now I know why some of the books I get from the library have
>torn out pages and polluted with highlighted lines.
>

I've never been blocked from viewing any website. I do have other OS's
installed that don't use the hosts file to block ad servers and
malicious websites so it is not an issue for me. My main OS uses the
host file though and I will continue to use it.

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 6:42:41 PM7/10/07
to
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 02:55:02 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid>
wrote:


>So I'm supposed to trust an unknown operator that runs a proxy server
>hoping that they won't track me. I could chain the proxies hoping that
>they aren't in collusion with each other. And, of course, I definitely
>want to impact connection reliability and reduce speed along with losing
>use of some protocols, like HTTPS. Last I remember, cookies are saved
>on my host, not on the proxy. I'm not remote desktoping to their proxy
>to run the browser from there. Javascript works quite nicely, if
>enabled, to report your IP address.
>
>I don't have to worry about cookies. I manage them rather than let them
>clutter, and I only have to manage just a few for the domains that I
>whitelist.

Sounds to me like you are overly paranoid for some reason.

Vanguard

unread,
Jul 10, 2007, 8:52:32 PM7/10/07
to
"Gladiator" wrote in message
news:4q2893pqli1ing7l4...@4ax.com...


You're the one trying to use public proxies to circumvent banning and to
hide your IP address while browsing and I'm the one that's paranoid?
I'm the one saying that I'm not going to bother with the unreliability
and reduced speed of using proxies and that makes me paranoid? I'm the
one suggesting a smarter and MUCH simpler solution of whitelisting
cookies rather than blocking all of them or bothering to maintain a long
list of blocked domains for cookies and I'm the one that's paranoid?
You mention proxies in a discussion about cookies while totally
forgetting where the cookies get stored and that makes me paranoid to
point out your error in logic? There are so many other methods of
tracking users, like using interstitial pages, that is seems stupid to
spend much effort worrying about and managing cookies.

Yep, based on some weird criteria of yours, I must be paranoid. Oooh,
what was that? It was another more interesting thread.

Gladiator

unread,
Jul 11, 2007, 1:14:13 AM7/11/07
to
On Tue, 10 Jul 2007 19:52:32 -0500, "Vanguard" <n...@mail.invalid>
wrote:


>You're the one trying to use public proxies to circumvent banning and to
>hide your IP address while browsing

Stop right there. I never said I was trying to hide while browsing. I
merely use it to foil the web forums that ban me. You're the one all
worried about proxies spying on you. I've got better things to do than
whitelist cookies all day too.


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