Slashdot Mirror


Microsoft Releases AntiSpyware Program

Nathan Weinberg writes "Microsoft released this morning Microsoft AntiSpyware, the product of last month's acquisition of GIANT. As I write in my report on my site, the program is very powerful, and certainly measures up to and may even beat Spybot and Ad-Aware. However, it's also pretty buggy, and Microsoft might have already sneaked in a pay subscription service."

9 of 580 comments (clear)

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Informative

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. Re:Lots of info left out of the summary... by Rolan · · Score: 5, Informative

    And lastly, there doesn't seem to be any evidence that Microsoft is making it a subscription service. I was able to download, install, and run the program all without signing up for a subscription of any sort. Maybe that's because the program is still in beta or maybe it's just anti-MS FUD on the subscriber's part... who knows.

    Reading the review would reveal why the submitter said that. The review says it might have a subscription based on the fact that it had 206 days until it expired. My personal opinion is that the expiration is there because it's Beta, but it may very well lead to a subscription service.

    As far as the summary not saying it's a beta... Well, seemed pretty obvious to me. They just bought the company afterall.

    --
    - AMW
  3. They don't want customers to run beta software... by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 4, Informative


    Microsoft has often done this. They don't want customers to run beta software forever. They want the customer to realize that he or she must get the latest version.

  4. Just ran it - some first impressions by Zocalo · · Score: 5, Informative
    I've literally just finished running it on a PC that I keep fairly clean through use of Spybot, Ad-Aware and Firefox instead of IE. It's pretty fast, even in its in-depth scan mode, despite some earlier reports that the GIANT version was slow, so I'm guessing this is where any of Microsoft's major code changes might have been. It probably took about three minutes to run on my AMD 3800+/XP box, so not too shabby compared to Ad-Aware and Spybot.

    As to the resutls, it turfed up three bits of possible Spyware which Ad-Aware and Spybot were missing/ignoring. The first was what it thought was Kazaa, but was infact Kazaa Lite (I've never had the original Kazaa installed). Second was some legacy registry keys left behind by WeatherBug which had piggybacked its way onto my PC with some shareware some time ago - fixed and reported to Spybot/Ad-Aware. Finally, it detected something called SearchSquire, but this turned out to be part of the Immunization feature of Spybot.

    So, aside from the conflicts with Spybot's Immunization feature and the false positive on Kazaa Lite's registry keys, both of which can be fixed by setting the detection to "Always Ignore" it's not a bad little tool at all. Expect of course, for the fact that Microsoft is clearly planning of getting people to pay for this tool according to the webpage and EULA. Hmm. Getting people to pay for cleaning up the mess that you helped create in the first place... Unless this product is *vastly* better than Spybot and Ad-Aware on a thoroughly owned PC, I don't think so, and even then I think not...

    --
    UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  5. Microsoft AntiSpyware, yeah it's called Firefox by kalislashdot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Funny.... Friends and Family are heavily infested everytime I visit. Install Firefox and Mike's Ad Blocking Host File and guess what, no more spyware. The best solution is prevention.

  6. Re:Lots of info left out of the summary... by jacksonj04 · · Score: 3, Informative

    That is most likely due to beta - alphas and betas of most MS software (and I'm speaking as an MSDN subscriber who can get hold of them) have expiry dates built in - I think the Longhorn tech release I have expires in August or something, and a beta of Windows 2000 expired before W2K was actually released. Can't speak for Office betas, but I feel it would be likely that they too expire.

    --
    How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  7. Re:Lots of info left out of the summary... by Wumpus · · Score: 4, Informative

    But it does run fine under Wine, and produces a validation code. The code isn't recognized as valid by the MS web page, though. Strange.

  8. Re:Information and Release by stupidfoo · · Score: 3, Informative

    It also seems like a way for MS to try and get rid of some worthwhile non-MS software.

    I ran the scan and it told me that WinPcap was spyware. Is MS trying to kill Ethereal?

  9. Re:Lots of info left out of the summary... by dirty · · Score: 4, Informative

    Microsoft also bought Internet Explorer, that's given away for free. They really don't need to make the money back with all the cash they have. The positive PR from giving it away for free could easily make up for the cost of the company.

    --

    -matt