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U.S. To Impose Spyware Control Laws

ArbiterOne writes "BBC has the story: A bill has been introduced into the U.S. House of Representatives to control the proliferation of spyware and malware. The proposed bill would force programs to inform the user before installing programs, and require that spyware be easily removed. A study by EarthLink found that the average user has 28 spyware programs on their computer!"

9 of 402 comments (clear)

  1. Believe it or not... by rd4tech · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had once to repair a user PC (average Joe's) with about 1447 installed whatnot... (according to adaware) It was taking the darn thing 35 minutes just to boot up and was veryyyy slow when operating. And she was having quite a powerfull machine too..

    1. Re:Believe it or not... by dealsites · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That sounds pretty resonable. On a side note, I bet the PC makers kinda like spyware. After all, it will eventually slow down the average joe's PC, and unless he knows how to remoe spyware, he might upgrade to get a "faster" PC.

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    2. Re:Believe it or not... by XryanX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Can you introduce me to some of your friends?

      All kidding aside, one of my friends got 3 1/2 free hours of tattoo work(~$300 at the price this particular artist charges) simply for removing spyware, running through scandisk and defrag, and taking unnecessary items out of msconfig.

      She ended up getting a Tux tattoo.

  2. Bloody obvious by hattig · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is a shame that things like this need to be made law.

    I expect that spyware already falls under the Computer Misuse Act 1990 in the UK regarding modification of a computer system without the user/owner being aware.

    As far as I am aware, these bits of software are viruses and should be treated as such. Including the writers of said spyware.

  3. It's About Time by Ridgelift · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Once installed, it can redirect web searches, install bookmarks or bombard a user with pop-up ads tailored to other search terms. It can also drain computing power, crash a machine and, in the case of the most malicious spyware, steal confidential information

    A friend of mine works for a technical call center for a large US hardware manufacturer. The contract he works on is supporting notebook computers.

    A customer recently called in because his computer was running slow. After installing and running ad-aware and spybot, the customer had over 4600 spyware programs. Yes, you read that right, over 4600 spyware programs. It's a miracle that thing ran at all.

    Legislation to curtail spyware is long over due. An operating system that is resistant to spyware is already available, and it ain't Windows.

  4. a lot of spyware already 'informs you'... by seibed · · Score: 5, Interesting

    a lot of spyware already 'informs you'... its just that the average public just clicks right through all of the legal stuff anyway.

  5. Copy Protected CD's by Professor+Calculus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I wonder if this will destroy SunnComm's copy protected CD model? The CD installs software on a Windows machine without user permission to prevent them from accessing it directly. Obviously this can be bypassed with the infamous Shift Key "Hack" anyway, but it works for most people cause they don't know what it is doing in the background. This bill could force SunnComm to get the user's permission to install the software, and even Joe Shmoe could bypass it then.

  6. Possible method of identification and removal by willith · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I deal with a lot of spyware/adware at work, and one of the big problems is that the user usually has no idea why the advert windows are popping up, nor from where they're coming.

    I'd love to see spyware makers be forced to provide a small link at the bottom of *each advert window* that says something like, "This advertisement is being shown to you by $NAME_OF_PROGRAM. Click here for more information." Then, you could click the link and be taken to a page with a brief description of what the program is and what it does, and how to remove it. If it was installed because you installed KaZaa or whatever, it should say so there, too.

    Perhaps I should torture myself further by dreaming up more completely reasonable but totally impossible things...

  7. Man, I hope you're right but thing you are wrong by gone.fishing · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A good portion of my day is spent dealing with spyware. I've noticed that in the past several months it has gotten worse, in some cases far worse.

    A law in the United States will only affect those companies with a legal presence in the United States. Many, many companies that offer software aren't in the U.S. Even if the law is effective on companies here, it will just migrate to somewhere that it isn't regulated and those Kaaza type companies will still be immune.

    While I hope you are right, I think that you are wrong and I guess that my attitude is that it is probably better dealt with using technology than laws. The loopholes in technology are easier to close.

    My ideal solution would be a system that would detect all types of malware and security threats and know how to fix them automatically. I'd like to see one component be "forward looking" where it would monitor computers and forward suspicious activity to a database that would be used to identify new threats in an almost real time manner. Of course this in and of itself could be considered "spyware" by some (because it would be reporting activity on your computer). But if all of a sudden xyzabc.dll started appearing on hundreds of computers in a short period of time, a human could evaluate it and figure out if it is a threat. If it is, it could be blocked on uninfected machines.