Slashback: Mexico, Ukraine, Oceania
... and you'll like it! LupusUF writes: "As everyone knows by now...Kazaa is using top text links Kazaa is using top text. But not only are they using them, they are badmouthing people who complain about them. When someone posted a complaint, a Kazaa moderator (Super_Harris) started out his reply by saying "How Dare You!" and then went on trying to explain why they are using top text. Another moderator makes some more poor excuses in the same thread. The same thread also has some very useful information about the spyware that kazaa has installed with the latest version (cydoor, Onflow, New.Net, WebHancer).
My advice would be to get ad-aware.
I hope Kazaa starts treating its users with more respect, and at least gets moderators that can answer questions without treating their users like idiots."
Sircam Sircam A quivering, cowardly reader wrote to point out that sensitive Ukranian government documents were apparently leaked by the Sircam virus. Even juicier than the steady stream of love notes, recipes, tax information, homework, bids and schedules that keeps flowing into my mailbox.
Don't look for much help from Microsoft on this, either, and hardly any from ISPs. Most of the ISPs I've contacted still claim not to have heard of Sircam, and say "it's not our responsibility." Email from Microsoft (after I cc'd them on a few of my virus alerts) equally disclaims responsibility. Funny how Sircam never made it to the front page of their site. Kudos to Charter Communications for calling customers to let them know they were infected -- and a pox on Prodigy for refusing to.
May the path of least resistance rise to meet you. Alec Muzzy writes: "Wired has a story about a failed plan to install Linux on computers for Mexican Schools in an effort to save money. Instead they have decided to run Windows, because Linux wouldn't run on their hardware. As they say, 'It was easier to go with Windows.'
Here's a perfect example of where the free cost of Linux should have been an advantage, yet they decided to go with Windows instead. Does this mean that the costs of running Linux are higher than the cost to purchase Windows?"
I've been using KaZaA for several weeks without intrusions or undesireable software running on my Windoze box.
The latest upgrade for KaZaA, including all the "enhancements" came over the wires either last Sunday or Monday. Neither TOPText, nor any of the other "intrusionware" were installed.
I believe "intrusionware" became a problem for us in 1998 or so with QuickBooks Pro and its desire to install AOL (Corel Draw! also installed some unnecessary crap by default). We realized that most default configurations of shrinkwrapped software tended to install things we didn't want in our (or our customers') systems. Ever since we follow these steps to prevent the introduction of undesirable code:
We found that, 95% of the time, our desktops (and those of our customers still using Windows) were easily rolled back to a known "clean" state by using these tools. The other 5% we had to manually remove one or two registry entries, or DLLs/VxDs loaded during Windows start up. If we absolutely must run a piece of Windows software (i.e. QuickBooks), we can usually pick and choose what to remove and what to leave installed by following this procedure.
About the KaZaA installation
In the case of KaZaA, it drops an upgrade program in its download/share folder. That program gives the option for a "custom install". Deselect (is that a verb?) the options that you don't want such as TOPtext. Watch your registry. No changes to the system.
KaZaA installs some banners and other annoyware under C:/WINDOWS/SYSTEM/adcache. KaZaA's UI is a modified version of Internet Exploiter. It's a web browser with a custom UI. You can disable the annoying ads at the bottom of the screen by:
This process sounds like a lot of work, but in reality it only adds about 2 minutes to every new software installation. It saves us from endless hours of grief at a later time.
Annoyware aside, I really like KaZaA. It's quick, and I've been able to find everything I searched for on it.
(If you see my previous posts, we're a mostly-UNIX shop. We (and several of our customers) run a hybrid UNIX+Samba+Windoze environment. No flames on this, OK? I'm a realist, and business demands that we use Windows under certain circumstances)
Cheers!
Ehttp://eugeneciurana.com | http://ciurana.eu
I have been needing the help and advice on some things, but files send I to people, no response! Where can send I this file to get advice that I am needing?
Goodbye!
---- El diablo esta en mis pantalones! Mire, mire!
Hardware compatibility problems have been solved, and the idea to adopt an open-source platform still stands.
This year, 1,400 schools will be equipped with external modems, and Ibarra plans to install Linux on those computers.
Dosen't sound like they're giving up to me. Also, they already have twenty schools running on GNU/Linux. They have schools already on it and they're planning to add more, it's just not a fast or as wide-spread as they had hoped. Just because a project dosen't go off as well as expected dosen't mean it is a failure.
Was Linux 2.4 a failure because it shipped a year late?
Jordan Bettis
``Wherever you go, there's another stupid sigfile quote.''Outlook viruses are, in my opinion, the responsibility of (1) Mictosoft, and (2) the Outlook user, who should be trained not to open crap that comes from random people with attachments! I really don't see how an ISP can help. (Of course, helpdesk people need to know about it, etc.)
sulli
RTFJ.
Organizations in Mexico, for some reason, would rather spend $5 on hardware/software than $1 on human resources. Perhaps it's because there's so much corruption everywhere that no-one trusts their employees to do their job and to do it honestly. Then again, can you blame them when a CS graduate might earn US$1000/month...
Believe me, the reason they went with Windows is because they'd rather pay Windows people US$800/month rather than paying Linux people US$1000/month, even if it means having to spend millions of dollars on Windows license. And, of course, some politicians will probably be taking a good part of that $124 million to their personal bank accounts.
Mexico is a wonderful country, but it's very frustrating to live here and see the incompetence and corruption in decision-making. Believe me, it makes American politics and decision-making seem PURE and reasonable in comparison. Heck, even Democrats sound coherent after witnessing the absurdities and abuses that go on down here--and for a Democrat to sound coherent ought to give you an idea of how bad things are down here.
Anyway, this isn't a blow against Linux. It's about par for the course in terms of Mexican political decision-making.
PS--For what it's worth, I can't really see the government actually paying for all the licenses anyway. They'll probably set aside $20 million for licenses, buy one license, and the politicians will keep the rest.
The punchline was that it wouldn't even uninstall from Add/Remove Programs. I had to reinstall it just to uninstall it nicely.
I've installed Morpheus from musiccity.com, and I'm running Ad-Aware again. Wonder if this'll turn out any differently...
(Side note, damn if Morpheus doesn't look almost exactly like Kazaa.)
I mean, at least BearShare practices disclosure when it wants to install garbage on your machine. And (although I've never felt the need to bother with this one) I'm sure that if you complained to BearShare folks, you'd get a more coherent response than "How dare you! ... blah blah advertisments and buisness..." OK, maybe the writer wasn't a native speaker of English, but I mean, come on. When I deal with anyone, even via email, I at least attempt to make an effort to sound and act like a professional (which, if you met me, is by no means assured). These guys look like a bunch of baked s'kiddies and halfwit marketers to me. If they aren't, then their behavior needs to adapt to what are really reasonable expectations from the consumer which aren't that hard to meet. Picking adware more carefully and clearly stating in the installation what each program is, and why it is installed would be a good start.
Kill Smart Tags:
political_news.c: warning: comparison is always true due to limited range of data type
Salon has a pretty good article on the whole parasite software thing. KaZaA figures prominently. There are some reasonable aspects of bundling such software, but it's ridiculuous to do so without a)allowing opt-out and b)clearly notifying users...
Buy Hex-Rated Stuff, fight the DMCA!