Sunday, February 19, 2006

Jim gets a warning (and gets called "silly")

I was going to review a couple of new storage tools this week but I got a very interesting (and pretty long) email this week.
I have to edit it for space (I’ll put the whole thing on my blog) but it raises an interesting point.


Q. “ I really think you should practice what you preach. You are always telling people in the newspapers don't go out and get anything that's free because nothing is free in the world of computers. Yet time and time again you send people out for free antivirus and programs like spy-bot which are considered freeware. From research we have conducted at my company we have found that Spy-Bot Search and Destroy, Ad-Aware and other so called freeware programs actually gather information from your computer and send it out to people who can use the information in mailing lists, etc.. They end up getting a monetary gain from those silly enough to use the program. They might remove some of the spyware infections but at a cost to the users in a loss of personally identifying information that can be used to SPAM them or even cause them greater harm. I suggest you stop telling people to use programs which you have not fully researched. If you want to use them fine, but don't tell others to go get them when it can cause them injury to their computer and their data. If you want to use them at your company that's fine, but don't push products that you really don't understand without complete programming knowledge of them and what they are doing in the background. I had a customer who followed your advice here this week and he downloaded Free Antivirus, and Spy-bot Search and Destroy thinking he was safe. His system got crashed from Spy-bot and the Antivirus let virus infections slip through. I suggest you either stop telling people to use freeware products before someone comes back on you about it and sues you. Consider this a warning.”


A. Point taken on my comment about “nothing is free” on the Internet. I should have limited that to “Nothing is Free Unless Jim Says It’s Okay.”
As for your assertion that SpyBot, AdAware or free anti-virus products like AVG, AntiVir or Avast are secretly gathering information from your computer and sending it out, that is patently absurd. All of these utilities have been checked out from top to bottom and none pay the bills by violating your privacy.
Many of these tools are written by people just for the interest of the public good. (I know that’s hard to believe) That’s how SpyBot, CWShredder and many others began. Pay versions of some of these emerged (like AdAware) but the free versions live on.
There’s nothing wrong with paying for utilities like Webroot’s SpySweeper; it’s just not the only way. In most cases, heavily infected PCs will require a technician. Just be wary if that technician want to sell you lots of security products.
WEEKLY WEB WONDER: Subratam.org is a good forum to discuss spyware and tools.

Monday, February 13, 2006

8 Rules for Safe Computing

If it seems like you’re having more troubles with your Windows PC lately in terms of spyware and pop-ups, you’re not alone.
The scumbags releasing the stuff into the wild are getting more clever in how they are distributing the junk and are getting more desperate as Microsoft Windows slowly becomes more secure.
We’ve had lots of clients in our shop say they’ve been told just to reformat their hard drives and start over, a pretty drastic solution to this issue. But if you’ve not been bombarded with pop-ups that won’t stop, you have not fully experienced Windows at its finest.
Some of these jerks are hiding their wares as Microsoft updates in the Control Panel (Add/Remove Programs) so users are scared to erase them. But very, very few pests can be removed that way.
What has developed is sort of a guerilla war. A new pest comes out and the user community jumps into the fray and dissects it. Some kid in Finland or New Zealand will release a cleaning tool and the community will decide if it works or not. It works much like how Linux was first developed.
Few of these folks make a dime (the guy who wrote SpyBot, one of the best tools on Earth, wrote it and released it free as an homage to a would-be girlfriend). Very few of the real commercial tools do a complete job of swabbing up the mess that these pests have left behind. (One recent PC in our shop took more than 25 separate tools to eliminate completely.)
So what can I tell you to keep you out of my shop?
Cut out these rules and paste them on your monitor.
1. Nothing is free on the Internet. All of those cute screen-saver and smiley programs and the cute kitten backgrounds are harboring spyware. Ditto all the cute games. Don’t download anything from a non-reputable site.
2. Peer to peer (person to person) file-sharing networks like Limeware and Kazaa are full of virus-laden files. Use them at your own risk and after attending church regularly.
3. You can get a virus from AIM and other instant messaging programs.
4. Virus programs don’t have to cost money. Head to www.filehippo.com and download yourself one if you don’t have one.
5. Buy a Mac. None of the above applies to the Apple platform.
6. Run Linux. Little of the above applies to Linux, but you knew that already if you run Linux.
7. Never click anywhere on a pop-up. Close it with the X.
8. Use the Firefox browser.

WEEKLY WEB WONDER: How soon before there is a Flash game on the Web where Dick Cheney fires shotgun blasts at fleeing hunters? In the meantime, check out the Olympics at www.nbcolympics.com

James Derk is co-owner of CyberDads, a computer repair firm, and computer columnist for Scripps Howard News Service. His email address is jim@cyberdads.com