View Full Version : Spyware Remover thomasgeorge 12-22-2001, 08:13 PM There is a neat, and free, little program you can download by going to ZD net downloads, called Ad-Aware which will remove spyware programs from your computer. Spyware programs report back to their host server at intervals and can send a lot of information about your browsing habits and so forth out into the "brave new digital world". If you have ever downloaded free programs or gone to sites which use these programs, you got 'em. While not a virus, they can cause intermittent slowdowns in your computers internet activity as they "grap" for time to report in. Anyhow, go on over to ZD net downloads and check it out if you are interested. Tom Doug Nelson 12-22-2001, 09:06 PM I use and recommend Ad-Aware. Just be careful to review its results before you tell it to delete. It is a safe and very useful program. Jean B 01-02-2002, 09:37 AM My computer guru (son) told me about this a few months ago and I installed it. It's amazing what it finds and gets rid of. Super little programme. I had 32 infected files :mad: It was no wonder I was getting so much junk....and I mean junk x yuk. I signed up for the free trial version of cute ftp and then started getting all this junk mail...hmmmmm. Thanks again for that recommendation. I have a question, I didn't go thru the files before I deleted them and I saw somewere that it deleted gozilla/or gozilla wouldn't work if.... I wish I knew what I was talking about here....anyway, what is gozilla and if I deleted something important how would I get it back ( I haven't gotten the go back program yet, darn it!) thomasgeorge 01-02-2002, 11:30 AM The only programs which would be affected would be ones which have the "spyware" module as an integral part of the main program, mostly of the freeware variety. Gozilla is a download assist program which is so-so, in my opinion only I hasten to add. There should be some info at the Ad aware site to fill in around the edges, as it were. I believe that in order to get a program to work that has been disabled by having its spyware removed, you would have to uninstall then re-install the program spyware included. Tom DJ Dubovsky 01-02-2002, 11:30 AM So how exactly do you make sure it singles out the bad stuff and not the good ones you want to be connected with? Or is this a certain kind of underhanded trick only the bad sites use that it detects and cleans? OK so I'm not real big on the technical lingo but I think you get my meaning. :D
DJ Doug Nelson 01-02-2002, 11:33 AM It's pretty easy, since most of the stuff is titled in plain English. If it says "casino" or "hot porn" or something like that, it's a pretty safe bet you want it to go. If it says something about one of your necessary or favorite sites, let it stay. If in doubt, keep it or investigate.
But I found nothing it wanted to delete that I wanted. It's just good general advice to be careful, though. DJ Dubovsky 01-02-2002, 11:38 AM Thanks. It does peak my interest since I've been getting some pretty raunchy e-mail and don't know why. Guess it's worth at try.
DJ Jean B 01-02-2002, 11:38 AM You get a list of the sites and it's pretty obvious which ones are unwanted. You can exclude any you think you might want (?) and delete the rest. Here is a screenshot of what I've collected in only a week. Your making me laugh here....I have a hard time even saying some of the stuff that ad aware found! I always think....what if something happened to me and all these freaky program files were found on my computer LOL! :) I was blaming the cute ftp freeware but now have tried to use my neomail in my website server area and says that I cannot access because the cookies were missing or something like that. Maybe my host server is the one with the spyware, I got the junk the same time as I signed up with them, used the ftp program.....just wondering? thomasgeorge 01-02-2002, 01:03 PM Spyware is linked with freeware in as much as the folks who write the freeware frequently include the spyware( charging companies etc. to direct info to those sites) as a way of making some money for their efforts. I suppose there is here the potential beginnings of a great debate about the pros and cons of this approach, but, I object to being electronically "tagged" without my knowledge or informed consent, and monitored, regardless for what reason. I just feel that if the program has spyware in it and requires the spyware to be active in order to work, I want nothing to do with it. Too much potential for mischief, as data tends to get traded and/or sold among business concerns, without the informed consent of the individual invloved. Terribly "Big Brotherish" I think and somewhat alarming..just my paranoid ramblings, although I was once told that the difference between a neurotic and a paranoid is that the neurotic thinks someone is out to get 'em while the paranoid Knows someone is. Tom Doug Nelson 01-02-2002, 04:55 PM Probably the biggest spyware perpetrator out there is Doubleclick. If you don't specifically go to their site and "opt out" they will put a cookie on your machine and track you from site to site (granted, they don't know who "you" is, and can only track you to sites that hire them).
Another variety is software that has a spyware element that is installed along with the software, such as Kazaa (a music service). Even uninstalling this won't get rid of the spyware. There are techniques to remove it fully listed on the web. CJ Swartz 01-02-2002, 09:22 PM Thanks, Doug! I went there and opted out immediately. Doubleclick is always on my cookie list when I'm housecleaning. thomasgeorge 01-03-2002, 06:53 AM While not software, those of you who work on computers at your workplace might want to check out the link below...its kinda interesting..in a spooky sort of way...http://www.keykatcher.com/howitworks.htm ...never know whos "listening"! Might be a good topic for a new thread in the salon area, something about insights concerning expectations vs. actualities of computer/internet/network privacy and how this might relate to working with someones treasured photos? Just a thought.... Tom DJ Dubovsky 01-03-2002, 06:50 PM Think of all the neat toys we could buy if we didn't have to keep spending money to protect our equipment ie. anti spyware, anti virus etc.
DJ thomasgeorge 01-03-2002, 07:32 PM Yea....Charcoal sticks and colored clay and blank cave walls are beginning to seem more attractive and considerably cheaper... Tom Okay, you've talked me into Ad-Aware. Even though I almost never get spam, I simply don't like someone looking over my shoulder. Reading some of the reviews, I saw where one guy said something about deleting files from the registry. I'm a complete computer idiot. Are there any guidelines as to what *not* to delete? Any specific file extensions or anything else to look for?
Ed DJ Dubovsky 01-03-2002, 10:21 PM Why doesn't your anti virus programs catch these spy things?
DJ thomasgeorge 01-04-2002, 05:11 AM Ed, the instructions on the web site and with the program explain all about how to work it, believe me, if I can do it, you can do it! It doesnot run amok thru the registry hacking out anything it encounters..I was leery of that when I first checked it out, but all it does is get rid of spyware and leaves everything else.
Dj, As I understand it, the type of coding and purpose of the programs are different from the virus ones, so the anti-virus programs look upon them as benign, and ignore them. Tom Thanks for the reply Tom. I'll surely give it a shot.
Ed | |