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Spitzer Sues Intermix Media for Bundling Spyware

CousinLarry writes "Attorney General and corporate watchdog Eliot Spitzer has filed suit against Intermix Software, alleging that the company deviously and deceptively bundles spyware with its 'free' screensaver and game products. 'Spyware and adware are more than an annoyance,' Spitzer said. 'These fraudulent programs foul machines, undermine productivity and in many cases frustrate consumers' efforts to remove them from their computers.'"

272 comments

  1. They're named Intermix... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    for God's sake!

    1. Re:They're named Intermix... by MaTriXxx1 · · Score: 1

      Ok, heres my rant...

      [ Free software! Click here to download! ]
      the average idiot SHOULD click that, and therefor not be able to get online to bother people that have an IQ over 5. I dont have an issue with 'Free software' having spyware. What I DO have an issue with, is the hidden installs, the installs where u just goto a site and it expliots some new issue with your browser. Thats what he should be focusing on.

      --
      Do NOT goto this URL http://www.forthesims.com
  2. At last... by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We really need these kinds of guys in our government. They honestly go after company deviousness, and are willing to prosecute them (and without being paid off).

    1. Re:At last... by Nevo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      While in this case, I'm all for Spitzer, he has at times seemed a little overzealous in his prosecutions.

      I wonder if we'll see him seeking higher office in the near future.

    2. Re:At last... by ShaniaTwain · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Excellent!

      lets set him upon the spammers!

      I'd vote for him several times.

    3. Re:At last... by deglr6328 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Seriously. Almost every time I see Mr. Spitzer's name in the media I like what I see. He is what I view as the embodiment of what it means to be a TRUE American. A genuine good-guy who isn't afraid to stand up for what's right and fuck everyone who doesn't like it. It's pretty sad, but I've never voted for someone who I really wanted to see in some particular office, just mostly against the person who I wanted to prevent from attaining that office. If Spitzer runs for Gov. of NY it would be the first time I would be voting for someone who I really thought completely deserved to win.

      --
      - "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"
    4. Re:At last... by sbszine · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'd vote for him several times.

      If Diebold is involved, you probably will : )

      --

      Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling

    5. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Agree. Some people say that guys like Spitzer (market timing in mutual funds, Dick Grasso's golden parachute) and McCain (steroids in MLB) are grandstanding, but these are issues that ordinary citizens care about.

      Unfortunately our issue, patent reform, doesn't really have a villain that politicians like to knock around in front of the cameras. Companies like Forgent, Eolas and the Myrvhold outfit are just taking advantage of the creaky system currently in place.

    6. Re:At last... by quarkscat · · Score: 1

      1x(Mark Spitzer) = 100x(John Ashcroft)

      Spitzer will likely run for NY governer next, but as far as I am concerned, he could run for the US Presidency. I know I would vote for him. And as president, it might not take too terribly long before the "current regime in power" would be sitting in the ICC docket at the Hague. (One can dream, right?)

    7. Re:At last... by Zordak · · Score: 5, Funny

      That only works for Republicans. Spitzer's a Democrat. If you want to cast multiple votes for him, you have to be dead.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    8. Re:At last... by gkuz · · Score: 1
      1x(Mark Spitzer)

      I know I would vote for him.

      So if you vote for Mark Spitzer, that will reduce Elliot Spitzer's chances of winning anything, won't it?

    9. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't New Yorkers learn from California's mistake?

    10. Re:At last... by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 4, Insightful

      what it means to be a TRUE American.

      Surely you mean, a true human being...

    11. Re:At last... by CalCudahy · · Score: 1

      Obviously you've never been to Chicago

      --
      "I think the U.N. is going to find that the blame lies with all the Sudanese rap music that glamorizes genocide."
    12. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, true americans are like true human beings, but 200+% as fat on average :)

    13. Re:At last... by eyegone · · Score: 1


      While in this case, I'm all for Spitzer, he has at times seemed a little overzealous in his prosecutions.

      Spitzer has stated that this is a deliberate tactic on his part. Since he doesn't have the resources to go after everyone who's engaging in a particular unsavory activity, he tries to really smack down a few of them pour encourager les autres.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
    14. Re:At last... by Aurostion · · Score: 1

      He's already running for New York State Governor, he announced back in December or January.

    15. Re:At last... by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 1

      And from Chicago.

      Our motto: Vote Early! Vote Often!

    16. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One guy said, "what it means to be a TRUE American."

      Another guy said, "Surely you mean, a true human being..."

      Although I agree that "human being" would have been a better choice of words. The fact remains that the grandparent said "American". To me, suggesting to replace "human being" with "American" stinks of political correcness. What is wrong with being a good American? Nothing! Are Americans the most holy and beautiful creatures that have ever walked the face of the earth? No! But hell, most of the people posting here are Americans and the grandparent was speaking of his love for a certain American politician who could run for office in America.

    17. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1x(Mark Spitzer) = 100x(John Ashcroft)

      Spitzer will likely run for NY governer next


      That Olympic Medal winning swimmer guy is running for Gov? Kick ass!

    18. Re:At last... by sconeu · · Score: 2, Funny

      Got my mom a T-shirt several years ago, so she could wear it on election day... It read:

      "I'm from Chicago... TWO BALLOTS PLEASE!"

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    19. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      We really need these kinds of guys in our government. They honestly go after company deviousness, and are willing to prosecute them (and without being paid off).

      Don't believe the hype.

      Almost every time I see Mr. Spitzer's name in the media I like what I see.

      Mr. Spitzer's talent is getting himself in the newspapers. He actually has very little dedication to prosecuting cases for the people, he just appears like it. That's why the NY Press called him The 35th most loathsome New Yorker:


      Yeah, yeah--we've heard all about Super Spitzer and his winning battles against Big Bad Wall Street. How could we have avoided them, with every periodical in town on their knees working for his gubernatorial campaign, gurgling up endless column inches of pro-Spitzer spin? We're as happy as anyone that Spitzer is taking on giants of corruption and winning, but let's peek under the tights. Spitzer is less a ballsy bulldog than a run-of-the-mill politicking pussy. Instead of levying the appropriate punishment against Wall Street criminals who defraud their shareholders--that is, sending the CEOs who helm these corrupt companies to an Oz-like prison where they'd learn the joys of Crisco--Spitzer's white-knight act amounts to settling with the "corporate evildoers" for a mere pittance on their billion-dollar balance sheets. Even the Wall Street Journal editorial board admits he's harmless, wanting only "a trophy dismissal, a big fine and favorable headlines." And though he rode into office in 1999 vowing to smash public-sector corruption, he's since learned the expedient lesson that it's unwise to ruffle the feathers of the political machine that lays the golden egg of incumbency and higher office--hence his studious failure to go after judicial corruption in the Brooklyn Democratic party.
    20. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      And stop calling me Shirley!!!

    21. Re:At last... by iminplaya · · Score: 2, Funny

      We really need these kinds of guys in our government.

      If that's what you all really want, then all it takes is your vote. Then watch who they appoint.

      --
      What?
    22. Re:At last... by nytmare · · Score: 1

      No way, I wouldn't vote for him for governor.

      I want him to stay the Attorney General!

    23. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you like to have politicians go after spyware and malware, why not toss $20 into his campaign? Just make sure that you read this part:
      By making this contribution I am notifying Spitzer 2006 that to the best of my knowledge neither I nor any corporation which I own or currently control has any matter presently pending with the New York State Attorney General's office.
      Sorry, Intermix your money isn't welcome.
    24. Re:At last... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (Score:2, Funny)

      Yeah, I guess encouraging people to use their vote effectively does sound kinda funny. Doesn't it? I mean, it's not like they would actually do such an absurd thing like that. You'd really have to be on drugs to believe something like that could really happen.

    25. Re:At last... by gothamboy · · Score: 1

      While I commend Spitzer, the real question is this: Where is the US Justice Department in all these investigations? Why is this guy, one of 50 state attorney generals (or equivalent), leading the prosection of abuses of spy-ware, mutual fund imdustry rip offs, insurance industry abuses, etc.? It is a joke to me that Spitzer on his tiny budget, relative to the US Justice Dept. can get so much done. No new laws have been passed in NY state to enable Spitzer to pursue these abuses, he is using decades old laws or simple civil lawsuits and is saving all US (and often world) citizens from these rip offs.

    26. Re:At last... by herbierobinson · · Score: 1

      He has already gone after spammers. Scott Richter in particular.

      --
      An engineer who ran for Congress. http://herbrobinson.us
  3. Let me just say it... by Nimrangul · · Score: 5, Insightful
    On byhalf of all geeks with coworkers or family members: Excellent.

    I hate having to spend hours a week cleaning people's dying machines of these damned things, they can completely make a system useless in less than a month with some of the less intelligent users out there.

    --
    I'm sick of following my dreams - I'm just going to ask them where they're going and hook up with them later.
    1. Re:Let me just say it... by eznihm · · Score: 3, Funny

      On behalf of all geeks who earn an excellent living cleaning spyware/adware: Keep 'em coming!

      --
      -- i drop mine in braille so you blind cats can read me
    2. Re:Let me just say it... by Indras · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hate having to spend hours a week cleaning people's dying machines of these damned things, they can completely make a system useless in less than a month with some of the less intelligent users out there.

      Surely you meant less experienced or less knowledgeable computer users. One of my clients owns a law firm, makes big bucks, and can easily hold his end of a complicated philosophical debate at the dinner table. But, he somehow can't seem to keep spy/ad/malware off his machine. But you assume he is less intelligent than you or I.

      Now that's elitism.

      --
      The speed of time is one second per second.
    3. Re:Let me just say it... by Nimrangul · · Score: 2, Interesting
      It's not elitism if you've explained to a person what they do wrong and how to avoid further issues, yet they call you back a month later because they can no longer use Windows cause, "it's all messed up," it's calling it as it is.

      If you explain to someone how to properly use Windows Update (as in not just ignoring that little icon on the bottom right) and yet they still do not do it, it shows signs of lacking intellect, or at the least comprehension skills.

      If you explain that downloading flash animations and dinky little games is bad, yet they continue to do so, it implies a lack of understanding if not downright apathy to learn from their mistakes.

      If you explain that going to pornographic websites drastically increases the odds of problems occuring, yet they ignore these warnings and press on with their porn perusal, they are a fool.

      I am not elite and do not consider my views elitist, I view people that are unwilling to even learn simple things as idiots, if they cannot be troubled to try something then they are not worth the water in their veins.

      --
      I'm sick of following my dreams - I'm just going to ask them where they're going and hook up with them later.
    4. Re:Let me just say it... by dodobh · · Score: 1

      I am sure he can afford to buy a Mac, and not use IE, Outlook, Outlook Express and the rest od MS office.

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
  4. Amazingly.... by theJerk242 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    'Spyware and adware are more than an annoyance,' Spitzer said. 'These fraudulent programs foul machines, undermine productivity and in many cases frustrate consumers' efforts to remove them from their computers.'"

    There are still people who have power in this country that are still sane.

    --
    Red Bull gave me wings and I flew into the ceiling fan.
  5. Decisions by mboverload · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now this is the government I want.

    1. Re:Decisions by njfuzzy · · Score: 1

      I bet dollars to donuts you don't feel the same about him after his next big headline.

      --
      My Photography - http://ian-x.com
      The Deathlings (comic) - http://thedeathlings.com
    2. Re:Decisions by Kenrod · · Score: 1, Interesting


      You're obviously not making $50 a pop removing spyware from the computers of idiots. No thanks, nanny Spitzer - I prefer to let Darwin sort this out.

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    3. Re:Decisions by C0llegeSTUDent · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Please. Removing spyware from someone's computer is the high-tech equivalent to cleaning toilets.

    4. Re:Decisions by mboverload · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I guess you haven't seen some of the really nasty spyware out there. That stuff is almost freaking impossible to get out.

    5. Re:Decisions by amliebsch · · Score: 4, Funny

      I guess you haven't seem some of the really nasty toilets out there!

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    6. Re:Decisions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you haven't seen some of the really nasty spyware out there. That stuff is almost freaking impossible to get out.

      Sorry. Removing spyware from someone's computer really is the high-tech equivalent to cleaning toilets.

    7. Re:Decisions by mikael · · Score: 1

      You haven't tried using the modern BT phoneboxes with the hinged plate glass doors.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    8. Re:Decisions by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
      Please. Removing spyware from someone's computer is the high-tech equivalent to cleaning toilets.

      Your analogy stinks. It's more like cleaning the shit away that some unauthorized entity dumped on my living room carpet.

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    9. Re:Decisions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For 40 or 50 bucks an hour, I'll clean toilets too. I'm not proud. And the toilets are probably more sanitary than the keyboards.

  6. Awesome by flakier · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Sweet, this guy is an example of what politicians should be like!

    --
    --
    1. Re:Awesome by aussie_a · · Score: 2, Funny

      Pffft. He's obviously looking to be bought. You'll see him change his opinion next article.

    2. Re:Awesome by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      no, i live in NY and Spitzer has been reliably anti-corporate overlords for quite some time. one of the few politicians out there I trust a all

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    3. Re:Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...Spitzer has been reliably anti-corporate overlords for quite some time..."

      Unfortunately, if he becomes too effective, the power behind the scenes will take him out one way or another. Money rules this country whether we like it or not.

  7. Damn you Spitzer by pHatidic · · Score: 5, Funny
    If Spitzer puts spyware companies out of business, people won't switch to Apple anymore. This is all a conspiracy by Spitzer to drive down the price of my AAPL stock.

    Mark my words Spitzer: I will bury you!

    1. Re:Damn you Spitzer by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 1

      I know. Then poor Larry Ellison and Scott McNeally would be the only major tech windbags left.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
    2. Re:Damn you Spitzer by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 1

      Don't worry I think tigerdirect will do a better job of bringing down your aapl stock tha Spitzer.

      --
      GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
  8. Spyware? by Omnieiunium · · Score: 1

    What is that? I haven't seen any since I used started using Firefox.

    Actually that is a lie. I rarely got spyware with IE, I just have some really good anti-spyware programs. I've cleaned up a few peoples computers who are just full of spyware. I hate people who just download stuff full of spyware. It is good to see someone taking a stand.

    1. Re:Spyware? by Nimrangul · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bullshit, that is not how all the spyware out there gets on a system. It isn't all IE's fault, people downloading shitty flash, screensavers and games are how most spyware get's on a person's system.

      --
      I'm sick of following my dreams - I'm just going to ask them where they're going and hook up with them later.
    2. Re:Spyware? by Nimrangul · · Score: 0

      Man, after reading over that I realise I come off to cockwady, I was agreeing that that is bullshit about the IE stuff but worded it way wrong. Meh.

      --
      I'm sick of following my dreams - I'm just going to ask them where they're going and hook up with them later.
    3. Re:Spyware? by Omnieiunium · · Score: 1

      yah I agree. I rarely get spyware regardless of my browser. I just don't download those stupid pop-up things or programs. It's sad that people still do.

    4. Re:Spyware? by brador4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I haven't got any spyware since I started using firefox. I don't know whos fault it is but, it's easier to get spyware/virues with IE.

  9. Spyware is hell by BlackEyedSceva · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do agree with this one. I find it completely unfair that I have to run Adaware Pro, Microsoft Antispyware, and Spybot just to get around the internet. We as the consumer should be treated with more respect. Buying a program with spyware in it is almost as bad as if one were to go to buy a sandwich and it had the cold virus in it. I am sure the government would have a problem with that. Why not take more initiative with this too?

    1. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      I do agree with this one. I find it completely unfair that I have to run Adaware Pro, Microsoft Antispyware, and Spybot just to browse hardcore-porn and warez sites.

      Fixed that for you. It's funny cuz it's true.

    2. Re:Spyware is hell by BlackEyedSceva · · Score: 5, Interesting

      While those are a major source of spyware and adware, it is hard to avoid problems when you are using public computers at a school. High School kids seem to find emoticon programs, search bars, and mouse pointer software amazing. It's to bad those like to bring along there freinds Alexia, Gator, and Bonzai Buddy.

    3. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree that this used to be true. Nowadays the bigger and more "reputable" ad companies are starting to do it, and all of their affiliate pages are starting to get filled with this shit.

    4. Re:Spyware is hell by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I find it completely unfair that I have to run Adaware Pro, Microsoft Antispyware, and Spybot just to get around the internet.
      You don't -- you can choose to run Mac OS or another *nix instead.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    5. Re:Spyware is hell by eobanb · · Score: 4, Funny

      Idiocy leads to Microsoft. Microsoft leads to spyware. Spyware leads to low bandwidth. Low bandwidth leads to buffering. I sense much idiocy in you.

      --

      Take off every sig. For great justice.

    6. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of these Anti-Spyware programs have all kinds of false positives too. The program I use thinks SETI@HOME, and my VNC Server is spyware. Idjits!

    7. Re:Spyware is hell by BooRolla · · Score: 1

      It's actually more like you buying a sandwich where some jackass wiped the bread with his shit-stained ass.

    8. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, most sandwiches you buy do contain the cold virus. It's just not in large enough quantities to be a problem for your immune system

      The problem with computers is, they have only a passive immune system (keeping viruses out) without an active immune system by default.

    9. Re:Spyware is hell by artakka · · Score: 2, Informative
      How does running Mac help to fight spyware?

      I thought spyware is a program that you install thinking it does something usefull, while it spies on you.

    10. Re:Spyware is hell by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 4, Informative

      Unfortunately there are alot of spyware programs like you mention, and often the false positives are NOT mistakes, but rather deliberate attempts to goad you into buying thier 'pro' version.
      In some cases the 'anti-spyware' uninstalls some spyware, but only to prevent competition with the spyware IT comes with.
      AOL's current anti-spyware offering falls into the last category IIRC.
      Your best bet for free scanners is likely ad-aware (lavasoft) and Spybot Search and Destroy.
      One site I've found that talks about the bad anti-spyware products is http://www.spywarewarrior.com/. Give them a look and see if your using one of the bad products.

      Mycroft

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
    11. Re:Spyware is hell by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Most spyware is made for Windows.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    12. Re:Spyware is hell by ShamanDave · · Score: 1

      I work for a school district too, and it's not just the students. The people who work in the offices are worse. In a student computer lab, one or two out of 30 will have a significant infection. In the offices, about half of them will be nearly useless from spyware and adware. I sat down at an elementary school office administrator's computer the other day, and IE had about five search bars. The address bar was shoved all the way over to the side so you couldn't use it. What kills me is they always say, "But I have to put smiley faces in the daily e-mails I send to all the teachers."

    13. Re:Spyware is hell by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2, Informative

      >browse hardcore-porn and warez sites.

      I dont know why porn sites get a bad rap. The one's I'm familiar with usually want my cash, not my browsing history. Its fairly common in the web porn industry to have some kind of monthly "adult pass" option payable by credit card.

      The worst offenders I've seen are:

      1. Download.com : probably the biggest spyware vector out there. Yes, I heard they are now zero-tolerance, but thats about 2 years too late.

      2. P2P apps. Bearshare, limewire, Kazaa, etc.

      3. Free crappy apps: stuff you coworkers run like "Wallpaper of the day" or "Kitten cursor!" Sofware written pretty much just to get those spyware installers on your machine.

    14. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You intrigue me... what feature of OS/X prevents Claria from releasing a Mac version of eWallet?

    15. Re:Spyware is hell by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's because most people run Windows. Migrate enough people to another platform and the crapware authors will follow. Security through obscurity is no security at all.

    16. Re:Spyware is hell by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Hey, I just said it was a solution, not necessarily a long-term one.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    17. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main feature is no ActiveX and no browser tightly integrated into the OS with security as an afterthought.

    18. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Migrate enough people to another platform and the crapware authors will follow.

      Yes, just like all those hackers attack Apache instead of IIS, right?

      Security through obscurity is no security at all.

      I love people who use a phrase, but have no idea what it means.

    19. Re:Spyware is hell by Kiaser+Zohsay · · Score: 1

      I find it completely unfair that I have to run Adaware Pro, Microsoft Antispyware, and Spybot just to get around the internet.

      You don't -- you can choose to run Mac OS or another *nix instead.


      Even if you don't want to go that far, Firefox and Thunderbird on Windows would be a good start. This old NT 4 box I sit in front of all day got Mozilla M18 when it was built, and some form of Moz has been my primary browser and email ever since. I have not ever, in very close to 5 years (May 1), been infected by an email or a web page.

      --
      I am not your blowing wind, I am the lightning.
    20. Re:Spyware is hell by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The hackers attack IIS because

      a) previous versions were less secure
      b) once you crack IIS, you can run all your ready-made Windows attack scripts; no need to write new ones for another platform

      But we digress; what does attempting to find a hole in a server have to do with writing trojans and convincing people to install them? Most malware installs require user intervention (ie the user has to click the "yes" button)

      There's nothing stopping anyone from writing software to turn a Linux or OS X machine into a spam relay, or to spy on user browsing habits. No-one bothers because it's not worth the time and effort as there are relatively very few users. Change that, and people will start to think that it is worth the effort.

    21. Re:Spyware is hell by Reaperducer · · Score: 1

      Security through obscurity is no security at all.

      This is the seminal lession we learned from the 60's:
      If it rhymes, it must be true.

      --
      -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
    22. Re:Spyware is hell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The main feature is no ActiveX and no browser tightly integrated into the OS with security as an afterthought.


      Neither of which will stop someone from installing some piece of crap like KaZaA along with all the associated spyware.
  10. Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    the goverment accually does something to protect our rights online

    us 3
    them 834

    1. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      ........where did the other 2 come from?

    2. Re:Finally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right protect my rights, I'm tired of having those stupid spyware programs get in the way of me dowloading my MP3, WAREZ and movies!!!!!

      Damm you hypocrites!!!!!!

    3. Re:Finally by W3bbo · · Score: 1

      AFAIK... it was the "Can Spam" act in California (not that it's done much for us really) and that government-funded university (ALITIW) that refused to disclose information about RIAA-targeted users. But there's much more the US government has done to protect your rights and computers on the internet than ours has... I'm surprised none of the "Big 3" (Lab, Lib, Con) have mentioned anything about what they plan to do with spam in their election manfestos. (And it's only 7 days away too)

    4. Re:Finally by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Come on. Get a sense of perspective. Spam and spyware are annoying, but they're hardly major election issues on a par with MRSA in hospitals, and Blair's lies about Iraq.

  11. I hope by zappepcs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I hope that they prosecute them for fraudulent business practices... nothing else really.

    If they are prosecuted for frustrating users, and causing machines to perform poorly, woe be unto the poor programmers of the world...

    hey.. wait a min, if they did that, then Gill Bates if phuqued!!!

    1. Re:I hope by rokzy · · Score: 1

      >...then Gill Bates if phuqued!!!

      I hope next he prosecutes you for the frustration you caused me by your spelling.

    2. Re:I hope by drew · · Score: 1

      Well since it's Spitzer involved, they'll probably never actually be prosecuted with anything. Just a lot of high profile public attacks and grandstanding until they cave to whatever he wants in order to avoid bad publicity and drawn out court cases. For the most part, I am in favor of nailing the people he's gone after to the wall, but I still find some of the methods he uses to get results a bit disturbing.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    3. Re:I hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if they did that, then Gill Bates if phuqued!!!

      No, actually. Everyone else would be. MS would be able to afford the lawyers and lobbyists to protect itself. The rest of us don't have that luxury.

  12. Verdict? by boobavon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The real question is whether or not they get convicted. Yay for spitzer having the cojones, but there's still the whole legal portion to get through. Notwithstanding i hope they go bankrupt, i'm tired of running adaware on my parents computer...

    1. Re:Verdict? by ZiakII · · Score: 1

      If your parents are anything like mine do what I do install Linux (personally I gave her SUSE has a very easy learning curve), Give them Open Office, Firefox, and create nice shortcuts for them to use.. I'm in the military so I only go home about every 4-5 months, every time I went home I would find a computer that I was forced to reformat and reinstall windows on it again, I tried to make it as easy as possible, I installed Firefox, Spybot S & D, adaware and tried teaching my mother on what is safe to do and what is not safe to do on the internet, but yet every time I came home the machine was always too infected to bother to clean , so I would be forced to reformat. Well since my mother is on Linux I have yet to do any work on her computer when I come home to see her =)

  13. How to solve these problems. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 5, Interesting
    'These fraudulent programs foul machines, undermine productivity and in many cases frustrate consumers' efforts to remove them from their computers.'

    As a matter of fact, I once had a run-in with exactly one of those spyware programs that frustrate your efforts to remove it from your computer. Mind you, this wasn't on any of my computers, which are Linux, FreeBSD, or Mac boxes. It was a secretary's computer at work, running Windows XP. Unfortunately, they still haven't listened to me about migrating away from that.

    Turns out, this secretary went to some website using Internet Explorer, which we constantly tell people not to use. The site automatically installed some software without her knowledge. The complaint was that her computer was lagging and running significantly slower than normal. I checked the Registry, which should be called the Madnesstry, and found under various Startup locations that there were some ten similar programs running. I deleted all of the associated keys. Turns out, the software installs a daemon that watches the registry and reinstalls the key the instant you remove it. Trying to shut down that daemon or delete the actual EXE files from the computer is a futile effort. The damn thing monitors its own existance in every way that you can imagine.

    Finally, I blew everything off the computer, installed Windows from CD, and personally locked down that box as far as you can say that Windows can be locked down, which isn't very far. Internet Explorer is hidden everywhere, and I actually put Internet Explorer icons that simply launch a window that says this computer is not authorized to launch internet explorer. Instead, there is Firefox and Opera to choose from. I also went ahead and created a blacklist of sites from here to Timbuktu. That solved most of the problems.

    1. Re:How to solve these problems. by drsmack1 · · Score: 5, Informative

      You wiped a computer because of spyware? What would you say if someone wiped their Linux box because Mozilla would not start.

      Just about the same thing. I have not found any spyware that could not be removed. Maybe you actually have to look something up on the internet; but I guess it is a better story if "it was so bad that I had to wipe the box!".

      Check out:

      http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/files/killbox.php

      and ...

      http://www.pcworld.com/downloads/file_description/ 0,fid,23258,00.asp

      And read a bit:

      http://www.pchell.com/support/spyware.shtml

      Not so hard if you really *want* to be able to do it.

    2. Re:How to solve these problems. by GeorgeMcBay · · Score: 1

      Don't get laid much do you?

    3. Re:How to solve these problems. by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 1

      Easy. Deploy a little program called "Spyware Blaster". Even before I switched to FireFox AdAware was having a tough time finding things to remove. Every scan only turned up tracking cookies.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
    4. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      and I actually put Internet Explorer icons that simply launch a window that says this computer is not authorized to launch internet explorer.

      You should have just linked the icons to Firefox. Just tell her it's a new version of IE, she probably couldn't tell the difference.

    5. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Trying to shut down that daemon or delete the actual EXE files from the computer is a futile effort. The damn thing monitors its own existance in every way that you can imagine.

      So you boot off a boot disk or Linux live CD and and remove it. This isn't rocket science.

      as far as you can say that Windows can be locked down, which isn't very far

      Sorry, you lost me here. Windows can be completely locked down with the right tools and knowhow. Perhaps you should spend less time with BSD, Linux and OSX if people are going to pay you to administer Windows boxes.

    6. Re:How to solve these problems. by deejer · · Score: 1

      Use Hijackthis http://www.spywareinfo.com/~merijn/downloads.html instead of reinstalling the OS to find those pesky self-monitoring spyware programs. Oh, and remove them in safe mode or the command prompt.

      crappy spyware.

    7. Re:How to solve these problems. by hal2814 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There have been several instances where I have "wiped" a company computer over spyware. Sometimes it is faster to nuke it (especially if you have an image backup) than it is to fix the problem. We do regular backups of all files neccessary to conduct business. I can completely redo a machine and have that employee ready to work at full capacity in about 30 minutes. If it looks like investigating and removing the spyware will take longer than that, the user gets a reinstall. Their work material will be completetly unaffected. A better idea would be to lock down these boxen a bit more but company politics prohibit such a move.

    8. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There's a new kind of spyware that reinstalls itself into the registry by hiding duplicate keys in flash files. There's been an article on this on /., I believe. You can go to the macromedia site, where they have posted instructions on how to disable this:

      Flash Player Help

    9. Re:How to solve these problems. by tftp · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It's not even just the time, it's whose time it is. Slip a DVD in, start the restore and walk away. Come back 30 minutes later and find the computer fully restored. This doesn't require much of human involvement, and even that is a SOP - and even then you know beforehand how long it will take and how well it will be done.

      Now compare that dumb restore to a manual repair. You have to be very well versed in spyware removal and must know where all the latest tripwires are installed (like the grandparent says.) I have more important things to do than to learn about malicious software, about every release of it. Also when you start you have no idea how long it will take and whether you will succeed, completely or partially. Also if there are many different spyware programs the repair time also grows - and finally how do you know that at some point no spyware is left? Only because you can't find any?

      If you are at home and have nothing else to do - sure, read about the spyware until your eyes start falling out, and then try to remove the thing - and once you fail, try and try again. But if you are in a business setting, just reimage the box in half an hour and be done with it.

    10. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would you say if someone wiped their Linux box because Mozilla would not start.

      I regularly do that sort of thing. If something is giving me trouble, I just wipe it and look for a new distro.

    11. Re:How to solve these problems. by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      I've used bootable versions of Knoppix and MEPIS to *copy* files from NTFS filesystems on XP boxes to USB thumbdrives. However, neither of those distros would let me *delete* anything from the hard drive (I was trying to get rid of some spyware by that method).

    12. Re:How to solve these problems. by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      Don't get laid much do you?

      You must be new around here...

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    13. Re:How to solve these problems. by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that once it's infected, you don't ever really "trust" that computer again. If you've got confidential information on it, it's often easier and safer to wipe the thing and reinstall from scratch.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    14. Re:How to solve these problems. by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      The difference is between mounting the drive read-only (ro) and read/write (rw). As of 2.4.29(I haven't used 2.6.x.y yet, so I can't speak for it), NTFS write support is EXTEREMLY flaky. It's not the distros' fault.

    15. Re:How to solve these problems. by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

      In this case a company computer was known to have been compromised. Though I doubt it's the case here in some situations security means a complete re-format and re-install to make shure company secretes (or customer data, nuke launch codes, whatever) are properly secured.
      Also if he's IT taking such drastic action might be a ploy to emphasize to the boss how BAD running IE can be in the corporate situation ("see, you just lost data and had to pay me for hours of work because a known security risk was allowed to continue).
      It also just might have been quicker than spending some time on the web to track down the uninstall procedure/program for the particular threat involved. Depends on how up to date the image being used was and such.

      Mycroft

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
    16. Re:How to solve these problems. by sailor420 · · Score: 1

      As someone who works his way through college fixing students' spyware-laden computers, I have to strongly disagree. I have seen more computers that were so infested with spyware that it was *far* faster and *far* easier to just blow them away than to spend *days* fiddling with it trying to remove obscure, nasty spyware manually, one by one.

    17. Re:How to solve these problems. by ramblin+billy · · Score: 1


      Index.dat Suite is freeware for Windows that will make a 'run-once' batch file you can customize to remove anything you want at boot. As a bonus it scans for and removes little MS gems like 'cookies/index.dat' and several other pesky 'unexplained' files. Overall the sites worth checking out.

      billy - damned sneaky if you ask me

    18. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Captive NTFS should allow you to write to NTFS by loading the Windows binary driver. It's probably part of some rescue discs (there were plans to add it to Knoppix).

    19. Re:How to solve these problems. by myov · · Score: 1

      Standard practice when a box has been compromized is to wipe it all, since you never know what else is hiding. Removal tools only remove what's in their database.

      I've tried to wipe spyware in safe mode, using MS AntiSpyware, Ad-Aware and Spybot and still couldn't remove some parts. That took me over an hour and it was still a waste.

      Some forms of spyware now attack the kernel, which means that safe mode is no longer a reliable method to remove spyware.

      My current cleanup strategy is one sweep using a Bart's PE live windows cd. If I still suspect that something is there, it's wipe time.

      (another thing Apple got right: I can do an Archive & Install; which backs up the old system folders, installs a new one and keeps everything else intact, in under 30 minutes. A windows install almost always requires reinstalling every app and hunting down drivers)

      --
      I use Macs to up my productivity, so up yours Microsoft!
    20. Re:How to solve these problems. by Ponzicar · · Score: 1

      I've seen spyware infections so bad that I had to go through the windows and system32 directories, deleting suspicious exe's after looking up each one to make sure it's not a windows component. And this was after running adaware, spybot, MS antispyware, spysweeper, cool web shredder, hijackthis, and symantec corporate, as well as uninstalling and removing all the crap from system startup and cleaning out all the temp directories. Plus the spyware often screws up the operating system files.

    21. Re:How to solve these problems. by advocate_one · · Score: 1
      "But if you are in a business setting, just reimage the box in half an hour and be done with it."

      Get the bl00dy data of the thing first though... ie hunt down and suck out the .pst files and other stuff the user will scream about. And don't forget the baby pictures and their wallpapers as well...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    22. Re:How to solve these problems. by Ponzicar · · Score: 1

      I've used bartPE to delete stuff like this. Just make an image, burn it, and boot from the cd. Nice for that junk that runs even in safe mode.

    23. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With a little practice, you get pretty good at removing spyware. There are some good tools out there. It is pretty rare that there is something you really can't remove.

      I do this about six hours a day, five days a week.

      But every so often, I hit a machine with thousands of infections. Hitting it with 3 different spyware removal tools and 4 different anti-virus tools can take a long, long time. Usually, I can get things pretty clean. But I often wonder if it is worth the time and effort.

      I tend to set some limit. If a computer is still pretty messed after an hour... nuke it. If it is mostly clean, but you had to do some drastic stuff and you're not sure how stable it will be from now on... nuke it.

      If it cleaned off well enough, make an appointment to do it all over again in about 3-6 months, then move to the next computer.

    24. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You should have just linked the icons to Firefox. Just tell her it's a new version of IE, she probably couldn't tell the difference.
      ...until the first time she hits an IE-only website that says "you're not running IE." Then it's just a quick trip to the "help" menu, where she'll see a menu item thoughtfully labeled "For Internet Explorer Users" that will make it quite clear that she is not using IE.
    25. Re:How to solve these problems. by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      I don't know what it is, but I've managed to pick up something that SpyBot, Ad-Aware and Microsoft's offerings cannot end. Ad-aware didn't even make a dent. The real problem is that sometimes its difficult to identify which infestation you have; in my mind, that last link is a written embodyment of what half of spyware should do. The other half is figure out which remedies need to be applied ie identification.

      And no, by "pick up something," I'm not referring to SP2.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    26. Re:How to solve these problems. by jaseuk · · Score: 1

      One approach I've used is to alter file permissions so that it's not permitted to read the file. That usually stops the very stubbon ones in their tracks.

      Jason.

    27. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anti-Trend · · Score: 1
      You wiped a computer because of spyware? What would you say if someone wiped their Linux box because Mozilla would not start.

      ...Good Lord, I almost shot coffee from my nostrils when I read that line. That's a really horrible example, since Mozilla isn't embedded in the freaking Linux kernel. Not to mention the fact that *nix users are typically not all constaly running around like insane little demigods on their own systems. Even if spyware did make it onto a user profile, it'd be trivial to clean up. Not at all like spyware on a Windows box, which is like a fox in a hen house. You may get rid of it eventually, but often the damage has already been done.

      Once a rootkit is in place, the results of spyware scans done fromt he infected system are tainted and cannot be trusted. I've seen things like this in the wild, and even a live distro with captive NTFS couldn't fix it.

      More on rootkits: http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=21326

      --
      Working in a DevOps shop is like playing in a band made up entirely of keytarists.
    28. Re:How to solve these problems. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      That's a really horrible example, since Mozilla isn't embedded in the freaking Linux kernel

      You appear to be implying that IE is embedded in the Windows kernel. Please supply some proof of this assertion.

    29. Re:How to solve these problems. by initialE · · Score: 1

      Personally I wipe computers because I want my users to feel the pain of having to move their data, lose their settings and wallpaper and games, and basically learn that my time is more valuable than to fix your damn shit just because you needed to see some smileys... Make em suffer along with you, that's what I say...

      --
      Starbucks, Harbuckle of Breath.
    30. Re:How to solve these problems. by Mesaeus · · Score: 1

      Safe mode won't necessarily work for the most aggressive spyware (like CoolWebSearch), but if you can determine the filename of the protector program (the 'daemon'), you should be able to erase it in the repair console (which you get by booting from a XP cd and choosing R), since that's the most barebones boot of XP.

    31. Re:How to solve these problems. by dangitman · · Score: 1
      Get the bl00dy data of the thing first though... ie hunt down and suck out the .pst files and other stuff the user will scream about. And don't forget the baby pictures and their wallpapers as well...

      The people who suggested re-imaging, also said that they have backups of user data. So why bother "hunting down" files on the box, when you can just get them from the backup?

      And what the fuck business does an employee have storing unrecoverable baby pictures and wallpapers on their work machine, anyway?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    32. Re:How to solve these problems. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      "That's a really horrible example, since Mozilla isn't embedded in the freaking Linux kernel"

      You appear to be implying that IE is embedded in the Windows kernel. Please supply some proof of this assertion.


      No, that's not what he is implying. Spyware is embedded in the kernel. If you were running as root and got infected by spyware under Linux, you could be equally fucked. Except 1) Mozilla isn't normally run as root, 2) it is not vunerable to most of the spyware out there.

      A non-functioning program you can fix because can trust the OS tools you use. Hell, a non-functional OS as well as long as no foul play is suspected. A spyware infected computer can't be trusted, not even in safe mode. You can't trust any of the tools, the information it gives you or that it provides correct information to clean-up programs.

      So the problem is with the GGP post. He's comparing an application-level problem to a system-level compromise.

      Kjella

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    33. Re:How to solve these problems. by dreamchaser · · Score: 1

      YHBT YHL HAND

      Seriously, the guy is trolling. Give it a careful read. It's riddled with tiny innaccuracies. I doubt the story is even remotely true.

    34. Re:How to solve these problems. by joshv · · Score: 1

      I have run across these sorts of programs several times. Never had to blow away the entire installation. Most often there is a service, or pair of services that are involved in monitoring for the program's removal. You just have to stop these, delete the programs and the startup entries, and you're fine.

      I now make it a standard practice when deleting spyway startup entries to hit refresh for about a minute to see if they come back.

    35. Re:How to solve these problems. by greenrd · · Score: 1
      What does that have to do with the content of the GP post?

    36. Re:How to solve these problems. by Elminst · · Score: 1

      This is why you have a server. Servers are where you store your business files, email, etc.

      My shop oversees a number of businesses who have policies that say something to the effect of "if you don't save your stuff to the server like we told/showed you 3 dozen times, we are not responsible for your fucking it up and losing it."

      And it's a business machine. The company is not responsible for your baby pictures.

      Business don't want you to show them how messed up their machines are and how much work you went through to remove the 1356 malicious files from the machine. They want the machine up and running ASAP, because as long as it's down, they're LOSING money.

      --
      No unauthorized use. Trespassers will be shot. Survivors will be shot again.
    37. Re:How to solve these problems. by PapiAlDente · · Score: 1

      "You wiped a computer because of spyware?"

      Isn't the standard procedure for fixing a compromised box (windows or *nix) reinstalling and restoring from backups?

      And you think safe mode will save you? Assuming the box was compromised as root (or Administrator), ANYTHING on the box could have been modified...how are you going to use safe mode to replace a spyware-modified kernel (for example: http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/02/18/192 0244&tid=201&tid=218)

    38. Re:How to solve these problems. by Captain_Chaos · · Score: 1

      SOP

      Slice Of Pie?

    39. Re:How to solve these problems. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1
      In my case, I think there were several services, all of which were monitoring all of the others. If you delete one, it'll be back before you can delete another. That's the problem. You have to simultaneously delete all parts of these things.

      My policy has always been to blow everything away and start from a known secure backup, or from scratch if no such backup exists, whenever a machine gets compromised. You just don't know what else is in there, and Windows is such a big, clunky, kludgy mess that you'll never figure it out. Even Microsoft doesn't know what mess lurks inside, and they've been fighting with it for years.

      But since this particular office is stuck with this crap, I've implemented all sorts of "baby steps" to get them off this junk:

      • First, by putting OpenOffice on all the computers. Then I simply wait for someone to get frustrated with MS Office, which is known for stupidities like putting its own formatting on things you don't want formatted that way, crashing, or being unable to open its own files (which OOo will succeed in opening, by the way). Then, I simply say, "Oh, just use OOo, it can do the job better than MS Office." And once they start using OOo on that computer, I wait a while, and then remove MS Office "to make space"...
      • I put Opera and Firefox on the computers, and tell people not to use IE.
      This will go on for a while. One day, the last few remaining programs that keep us stuck with Windows will work on somthing other than Windows... Programs like AutoCAD, which we use because our customers demand it. Other CAD programs cannot read and write AutoCAD's file format in an acceptable way, and trying to work around the problems costs too much. When AutoCAD becomes available for Linux, Mac, or anything else, we'll dump Windows in the CAD department in an instant.
    40. Re:How to solve these problems. by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      What did you do when you had two or more processes which start each other when you kill each one?

    41. Re:How to solve these problems. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seen this one before.

      What you do is go into the registry and change the permissions on the HLKM/Software/Microsoft/Windows/Run. Remove the system permissions and make sure Administrators is set to full control.

      The apps run as the system account. No access on that registry means it can't recreate it's keys. So kill the processes, delete the executables and then change the reg key permissions back to default.

      Works like a charm.

    42. Re:How to solve these problems. by Error27 · · Score: 1

      At one place where I worked, someone brought in a computer from home that wasn't usable because of some malware.

      When we hooked it up and turned it on, it took down the _entire_ network for the building.

      Pretty fun.

  14. Re:spam sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought Spam WAS donkey balls.

  15. Spitzer is amazing. by philovivero · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He's the only politician that makes headlines that I've liked in more than a decade.

  16. More info on *&^%$#@! spyware companies ... by xmas2003 · · Score: 4, Informative

    While I think Splitzer can be a bit overzealous and grandstanding (plus laying groundwork for his run for political office), I can't think of a better group of companies to go after than *&^%$#@! spyware companies. For those interested in some great detailed info about these cockroaches, take a look at Ben Edelman's web site ... where he also indentifies the folks who finance 'em.

    --
    Hulk SMASH Celiac Disease
    1. Re:More info on *&^%$#@! spyware companies ... by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I think Splitzer can be a bit overzealous and grandstanding (plus laying groundwork for his run for political office),

      All of that may be true, however he is also doing a lot of good in the process. As far as I am concerned we could use a few more like him.

    2. Re:More info on *&^%$#@! spyware companies ... by ljfrench · · Score: 1
      ...where he also indentifies the folks who finance 'em.

      I got indentified once, too. I released the safety on a punchdown tool and pressed it into my hand. Now I have ten little indentifications...

  17. Yeah, look what he did to the head of AIG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    What did he charge him with, again?

    Oh, that's right. Lot's of public attacks, not one indictment yet. That's an ethical prosecutor, isn't it?

    Spitzer's an ambitious politician. He's using his position as NY AG to play for higher office.

  18. Gotta love the quote: by IANAAC · · Score: 4, Funny
    Some repair shops blame spyware for more than half the trouble they're seeing.

    Uh, isn't that the point of their business? They're a REPAIR shop. Next thing you know they're going to complain about "lost business" resulting from the suit.

    1. Re:Gotta love the quote: by yoth · · Score: 0

      We just had our personal best at work. We brought a new satellite office onto our network. Officescan found one computer with 6,000 infected files. I think it was a dedicated porn downloader for the office.

    2. Re:Gotta love the quote: by Plug · · Score: 1

      Isn't the goal of the Police Department to rid the city of crime, at the risk of putting itself out of work?

    3. Re:Gotta love the quote: by IANAAC · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Isn't the goal of the Police Department to rid the city of crime, at the risk of putting itself out of work?

      In my neck of the woods (SF bay area), the goal seems to be writing up parking violations.

      While fighting crime is worthy of mention, it generates no income for anybody. On the contrary. It ends up costing money.

  19. Intermix Stock impacted by fugas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Seems like Intermix's stock took a hard hit due to this news today.

    1. Re:Intermix Stock impacted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Seems like Intermix's stock took a hard hit due to this news today.

      WRYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY
  20. New York Only by Roofus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm surprised nowhere in the writeup does it mention that Spitzer works for the New York State government, not the US Federal Government. There is a difference.

    http://www.oag.state.ny.us/

    The Attorney General of the US would never stand up for citizens.

    1. Re:New York Only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because at that level of government, citizens don't even stand up for themselves.

      Sad, really.

    2. Re:New York Only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Attorney General of the US would never stand up for citizens."

      You are quite wrong, sir. The US attorney general has been quite vocal in protecting certain citizens' god given rights to torture certain other citizens.

  21. Two words by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 3, Informative
    Safe Mode.

    Nuking the site from orbit is not the only option.

    1. Re:Two words by bradleyland · · Score: 2, Insightful

      winlogon.exe

      Getting rid of the latest variants of the VX2 type spyware is a non-trivial process. These variants attach themselves to processes that run even in safe mode.

      From a time efficiency standpoint, nukes from orbit look awefully attractive.

    2. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nuking the site from orbit is not the only option

      But it's the only way to be sure.

    3. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's true in this case too! If I found a rootkit on my system I wouldn't just "clean" it, I would wipe it for sure. Isn't spyware just a mild form of rootkit?

    4. Re:Two words by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I'm beginning to think that VMware ACE or VMware Workstation or something like that would be a good idea. This is the scheme I thought of for the office:

      All files are already stored on a server, which makes the files available to Windows users via Samba. This server runs FreeBSD and never crashes. :-) All user-generated files are supposed to be placed here, and we discourage saving on individual desktops because it's too time consuming to back them up. So they're imaged from the day the OS and the apps are installed, and that's the only desktop backup.

      My idea is this: All desktop computers throughout the company would run the Windows OS through a virtualizer. A disk image file would be used for this virtualizer. Everything else would "pass through." And the virtualizer will be configured so that all changes to the disk image would be lost when the machine is shut down. (Or copy a duplicate disk image on top of the one that is being used.) That way, each startup is a fresh one, just like the day the machine's OS was first installed. Spyware? Reboot. Gone. And with a disk image, you can MD5sum it, sign it, and know for a fact that nothing was changed.

      As an improvement on that approach, I would design a bootloader that would snatch control after the BIOS but before the OS. It would reset the disk contents to the good known image and then pass control to the OS. You'd think this would take a long time, but I think a basic Windows install with all the apps (remember, the data is on a server) only takes up a few gigs, and that can be restored quickly.

      I'm still thinking about both of these approaches. Basically, I'd like to make sure that no matter how a user abuses a system setup, it will always return to the way I want it to be, without my intervention.

    5. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just use Deep Freeze. It would be a hell of a lot simpler and cost a hell of a lot less.

    6. Re:Two words by drew · · Score: 1

      rather than going through a whole mess with the virtualizer maybe you could just use a live cd? (or live dvd depending on how many apps you want to have installed.) set up a clean system, burn the whole image to your optical media of choice and then set up the boot loader to boot the cd/dvd instead of the hard drive. i'm not sure exactly how hard it is to set up a live cd with windows, but i know it's been done.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
    7. Re:Two words by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      First of all: Have you checked the pricing for VMWare? Any (legal) setup would require 2 windows licenses + 1 VMWare license/computer.

      Which is roughly $1200 retail IIRC.

      I would suggest rigging something up with ghost or something, to just re-image over the network every night. Although I have never done it, so YMMV.

    8. Re:Two words by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      Safe mode isn't necessarily good enough to stop some spyware from running (which means that they can prevent you from removing them).

      You have to use a boot disk to be sure, and even then some spyware will use Trojan-kit & virus-like infection tactics to squirrel copies of themselves away for future infection.

      The _only_ sure way to get rid of spyware is to wipe & reinstall. If you're lucky, you won't have any executable code embedded in your data, and you'll be able to save that too. Any other tactic is just playing the odds that you're smarter than the virus-author.

    9. Re:Two words by BillX · · Score: 1

      I see it going to spyware-nuking bootdisks... many of the newer pests are finding ways to autoload even in safe mode.

      --
      Caveat Emptor is not a business model.
    10. Re:Two words by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1

      Who said VMware would run on Windows? I would run it on Linux. In fact, what I forgot to mention is that I'd like to try running that on a blade server in the locked, protected server room, put Linux on the actual workstations, and let them use Firefox, OpenOffice.org, and whatever other "replacement" software I can find, on the computer natively; VMware would not physically run on the same computer, but though the built-in networking capabilities of X, I'd display it through gigabit ethernet. This might be fast enough to run those programs that keep us stuck with Windows. Retail, this would cost about half of your figure, and if it worked, we could use the desktop computers until they literally blow up, and then replace them with any $300 box that can run Linux. Or even Macs, if we want to make the office look cool...

    11. Re:Two words by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      You will need many many gigs of memory if you want to do this for any non-trivial userbase.

  22. Dangerous precedent by katana · · Score: 5, Funny
    'These fraudulent programs foul machines, undermine productivity and in many cases frustrate consumers' efforts to remove them from their computers.'

    Great. There goes Minesweeper.

    1. Re:Dangerous precedent by Vapebait · · Score: 1

      Correction: There goes Windows.

  23. yeeehaaarrrrr by NoGuffCheck · · Score: 3, Funny

    its high time we had a hangin!

    seriously though, Perhaps it's fate that today, Arpil the Twenty ninth, we will once again fight for our freedom. Not from tyranny, persecution or oppression. But from assholes that bundle spyware with free screensavers. We're fighting for our right to live, to exist. From this day on, the twenty ninth day of April will no longer be remembered as an American holiday (not that it ever has) but as the day that all of mankind declared we will not go quietly into the night. We will not vanish without a fight. We will live on. We will survive.

    /rant

    --
    serenity now!
    1. Re:yeeehaaarrrrr by AeroIllini · · Score: 4, Funny

      seriously though, Perhaps it's fate that today, Arpil the Twenty ninth, we will once again fight for our freedom. Not from tyranny, persecution or oppression. But from assholes that bundle spyware with free screensavers. We're fighting for our right to live, to exist. From this day on, the twenty ninth day of April will no longer be remembered as an American holiday (not that it ever has) but as the day that all of mankind declared we will not go quietly into the night. We will not vanish without a fight. We will live on. We will survive.

      Is it bad that I instantly had a vision of Eliot Spitzer uploading a virus from his Powerbook to the Intermix Corporate Headquarters, which he accessed with a stolen Intermix scout ship piloted by a fast-talking African-American costar?

      --
      For security, the MD5 hash of this message and sig is 09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0.
    2. Re:yeeehaaarrrrr by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many people were offended that the 'urban' black character basically chaufferred the 'smart' white guy around.

  24. Thank you! by showardkid · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Seriously, people: let's take a look at how perspectives are these days:

    Whenever a hacker (or cracker, distinction here http://searchwindowssecurity.techtarget.com/tip/1, 289483,sid45_gci998037,00.html.) breaks into corporate networks, he's a CRIMINAL, and his purpose is evil. Even if he does not do anything that damages productivity, purported "loss of funds" can get him imprisoned.

    Contrarily, when a corporation with no morals or respect for users releases a spyware program for research/marketing with illegal methods, Advertisement, Data mining, etc., no one tends to lift a finger. I salute Spitzer, and hope that this sets some sort of precedent to protect consumers and businesses from these sorts of programs that waste productivity and generally piss people off.

    --
    Do, do not, or delegate to someone else: there is no try.
    1. Re:Thank you! by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      There is one difference, of course - most of the spyware that affects end users is installed by the user, with the user's permission (yes, I *know* it's buried deep in the EULA that no-one reads, but it often is there). It's arguably fraud/misuse of computer facilities/deception or whatever, but it's a greyer area. In contrast, actively breaking into a network is definitely illegal, and easily prosecuted.

      Now, I'm not trying to defend the practice, I'm just putting forward my point of view, that it's a lot harder to prosecute this sort of thing than one may think.

      Oh, and I say this every time, so it's nothing personal - but give up the cracker/hacker distinction, that fight's been lost. Words change their meaning, whether people like it or not.

    2. Re:Thank you! by showardkid · · Score: 1

      Yes, I know the distinction is mostly a lost cause, but once upon a time people didn't gasp when one said "I'm a hacker". Anyway, what I was referring to was how hackers who don't actually cause damage get prosecuted; the "white-hat" crowd. I still think that "Black-hat" people should be prosecuted if and when they are caught. Spyware is buried in a EULA, and I am beginning to believe that EULAs are so long because they're intended to hide something in the middle. Seriously - how about a table of contents so we can skip to the relevant stuff?! Spyware is designed to make peoples' lives more difficult specifically for the greed of those who own these companies. In contrast, white-hat hackers are doing a service to others, and if they cause a small (keyword, small) amount of damage in the process they should not be penalized.

      --
      Do, do not, or delegate to someone else: there is no try.
  25. You didn't hear? by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 4, Informative

    He'll most likely be running for governor of New York state.

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.
    1. Re:You didn't hear? by ajakk · · Score: 4, Informative
    2. Re:You didn't hear? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting web-site, especially with the use of Microsoft Word .doc documents - it's fun to read the file statistics and see who edited the documents. Example, the migration-from-NY-state document was written by Eddie Vale.

    3. Re:You didn't hear? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lot of good he'll do there.

    4. Re:You didn't hear? by Mobster · · Score: 1

      WOW! Now if Guliani throws into the ring.. I would be hard pressed to decide!

      (Unless Diebold decides for me. I see a running gag here with Diebold).)

      --
      ---- You have been programmed by the Illuminati to not see the word ""!
  26. Intermix is not just spyware by Tezkah · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's worth noting that Intermix also runs the popular "networking" website MySpace. This site is used by lots of people, and many bands have pages set up on there. Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins fame even has a profile on there.

    Makes you wonder what they're doing with the information people put on there.

    1. Re:Intermix is not just spyware by planetoid · · Score: 2, Funny

      They're mapping a Big Brother database cataloguing the movements, activities, and social networks of trendy scenester teeny-boppers across international boundaries, working tirelessly to slow the influx of shoegazer music and needlessly-spiky hair past American borders.

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
  27. Legal details, please? by Weaselmancer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First off, I'm as happy as everyone else someone is finally going after these scumbags.

    But at the risk of casting a dark cloud over the whole affair, Mr. Spitzer is sueing Intermix, not arresting them.

    So...anyone know exactly what they're exactly being sued for? "Secretly installing software" is a little vague for a legal charge.

    Another question. Why sue? He's the Attorney General. Why not prosecute instead?

    So can anyone with some legal insight shed a little light here, so we know how happy to be?

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
    1. Re:Legal details, please? by Xoro · · Score: 1

      Another question. Why sue? He's the Attorney General. Why not prosecute instead?

      I believe it's because you can sue a corporation, but you can only prosecute individuals. It is much easier to prove that a corporation has misbehaved than to reconstruct the whole history that assigns individual actions to individual people within the corporation.

      Additionally, violating a civil code does not always mean violating a criminal code.

      --
      Kill, Tux, kill!
    2. Re:Legal details, please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nope. you can prosecute corporations with criminal sanctions just like people. corporations have to pay a fine tho and arent put in jail obviously.

    3. Re:Legal details, please? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      which is why he is using a lawsuit instead, lawsuits and criminal prosecutions have about the same punishments for corporations, and lawsuits are easier to win (preponderance of evidence vs. reasonable doubt)

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    4. Re:Legal details, please? by overbom · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IANAL, but Spitzer has roughly similar powers to the Attorney general of the U.S. (can bring both civil and criminal cases to court), and I think most other state attorney generals don't have that power granted to them.

      He has the authority to sue under N.Y. antitrust, civil, and criminal lawsuits. By bringing a civil suit, he can avoid the pitfall that Giulani's (the previous Attorney General) successes kind of missed -- In a criminal case, the companies could appeal, drag it out, and you allow an illegal activity to carry on longer.

      Again, if I understand things, a civil suit allows a criminal suit to be brought later and offending companies are more likely to cave to a settlement instead of going for a potentially drastically more expensive and PR-costing 'innocence.'

      But I'm not a lawyer and I might not understand things correctly.

    5. Re:Legal details, please? by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

      Simple:

      It has to be made apparent that you're going to lose money as opposed to gain it in a pursuit that entails intruding on one's digital rites.

      Legal injunction doesn't mean anything anymore. It's something that actually affects the bottom line that's going to make for change, if any.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    6. Re:Legal details, please? by TIMxPx · · Score: 0
      Why sue? He's the Attorney General. Why not prosecute instead?

      $$$$$?

      Seriously, i applaud Spitzer for going after some dirty rotten liars, cheaters, and thieves, although i'm not positive he isn't one of those things himself. He seems to be extremely selective in taking legal action. Maybe it's about publicity, maybe money, maybe good or bad judgment.

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world: That averages about 660,000,000 of each kind.
    7. Re:Legal details, please? by drew · · Score: 1

      while i haven't read too much about this case in particular, based on some of spitzer's previous involvements, i'd guess that he's suing because in order to prosecute you have to have a burden of evidence in order to bring a case against a defendent. on the other hand, you can sue for just about anything. by suing, he can make their life, financially and otherwise, pretty miserable for some time, regardless of whether he really has any ground for winning the suit. to prosecute them in a criminal court it would be much more difficult to get the same results.

      --
      If I don't put anything here, will anyone recognize me anymore?
  28. Whoops by Weaselmancer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Poor practice to respond to one's own post, but there are a few more details further into the article.

    Spitzer's civil suit accuses Intermix of violating state General Business Law provisions against false advertising and deceptive business practices. He also accuses them of trespass under New York common law.

    Ok, that's better but could still use a little clarification. Trespass? Is that the closest approximation NY law has to hacking into someone's computer? Usually it's some sort of wiretapping law that gets called into play.

    Still would like to know why he's not prosecuting instead of arresting. We're always howling about how vague the DCMA and laws like it are...how vague they are and how they can nail anyone because they're so broad.

    So...can't we use these rotten open-ended anti hacking ??AA laws to nail some actual criminals, rather than teenagers with big MP3 collections?

    It'd be a great way to at least use these lousy laws to our advantage a bit before they go away. And they will too, once it gets demonstrated that they can be used to bust businessmen as well as teenagers.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  29. Educators fund Intermix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting
    In a very revealing article, it has been found that at least three educational retirement funds are invested with Intermix:

    http://castlecops.com/article-5943-nested-0-0.html

    TIAA-CREF

    CALIFORNIA STATE TEACHERS RET SYS

    NEW YORK ST TCHR RTRMT

    1. Re:Educators fund Intermix by rsborg · · Score: 1
      TIAA-CREF
      CALIFORNIA STATE TEACHERS RET SYS
      NEW YORK ST TCHR RTRMT

      Ok, why the fuck are educational retirement funds backing a spyware maker? I don't have any relatives or friends who are teachers that pay to these funds, but ... wtf? How can we tell these investors to "fuck off" and not invest in borderline criminal companies?

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    2. Re:Educators fund Intermix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We saw such a fund enter SCOX... after their whole "sue the world" debacle.

      I don't recall exactly when, but I do believe they lost a bundle.

    3. Re:Educators fund Intermix by TheHawke · · Score: 1

      They'll bail after they see the news, just watch intermix's stock ticker plummet like the hammer aimed at the fraudster's hands.

      --
      First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
  30. -1, Dumbass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF?

    Was there any point to that? I've never seen a more incoherent post in my life

  31. access rights are beautiful by r00t · · Score: 1

    Deny access to "Everyone".

    This is usually much better than removing stuff,
    because the app won't get reinstalled later.

  32. Agreed by multiOSfreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm in NYC and Spitzer is real bulldog. This guy will go after any corporation for any bullshit they try to pull. He's the real deal.

    Now if we could just unleash him on Wal-Mart...

  33. He should go after the NY Legislature instead by toupsie · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Instead of trying to protect consumers from companies, he should be going after the NY Legislature to protect taxpayers. I screwed more often through NY State confiscatory tax policy than I have ever been through a screen saver. Consumers can always protect themselves from this threat, citizens cannot protect themselves from a gerrymandered state legislature with a inept RINO governor.

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  34. But he caved on the Microsoft antitrust case by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wasn't he one of the first state attorneys general to decide NOT to independently sue Microsoft after the federal government dropped its monopoly case against Microsoft?

  35. What about the advertisers? by the_enigma_1983 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Can't we do something about the people who advertise through spyware? If no one pays the spyware companies, the whole thing falls through. Plus the advertisers might have a reputation to maintain, unlike spyware companies who no one knows about.

    1. Re:What about the advertisers? by rjelks · · Score: 1

      If we could manage to figure that out, we'd have spam licked too.

  36. Don't Laugh! He's being serious! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No joke, bubba.

  37. Yeah! by lheal · · Score: 1

    Can I sue the Attorney General fer loss of income?

    --
    Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
  38. Where is Intermix? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Here: Intermix is located at 6060 Center Drive, in Los Angeles. (from Contact Us)

    Also in that building: Square Enix

    Vivendi Universal Games

    Newmark Realty Capital

    Some lawfirms

    1-800-DENTIST

  39. Re:How do you know if youre a GNU/Linux zealot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Who cares what you guys think down under (yes, I mapped your IP address)

  40. I have a question. by William+Robinson · · Score: 1
    This is excellent move and welcome by most of us. I use Linux and rarely face this problem. But happy to see something good for the mortals.

    I have one question though, before saying cheers. Will this business of building spyware be taken out of US? Can we take any actions against companies, that *SUPPLY* spyware through websites outside US?

    1. Re:I have a question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the company is from the usa, maybe. If its bankrolled by a person/company in the usa, maybe. But, not if the people are outside of your jurisdiction, that just wouldn't be right. That'd be like arresting someone in Amsterdam for smoking pot because its illegal in the US.

    2. Re:I have a question. by meadowsp · · Score: 1

      You're seriously disturbed if you think running Linux makes you immortal.

  41. Re:spam sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I once got spam that tried to sell me donkey balls. Claimed it was an ancient Mayan male enhancement.

  42. wonderful day! by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    First schools don't disclose students' info to the RIAA, and now the spyware companies get sued.

    What a glorious day :)

  43. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Believe me it's not all porn sites and such that dish out the spyware.
    I've cleaned it off machines that got infected because a 12year old Wrastling fan VISITED some 'fan' site.
    I watched the re-infection try to happen, his mom had heard the same story it was all from porn sites and figured her son had hit 'that age' (peuberty to ten minutes after death for most of us :) ).
    To prove to his mom that's not what he was doing he showed us each of the sites he went to. When he hit this fan site the blocker I was using at the time went nuts with about 8 attempts to infect, two of them would have worked without any further action than simply viewing the site in pre-sp2 xp.
    These days it's more often the aforementioned smilies and cursors and some simular crap.

    Mycroft

    --
    https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
  44. If the companies want to clean up by jonwil · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If the companies clean up their act, they wont get labeled "Spyware" anymore.

    Steps to take:
    1.Make it possible to remove the program 100% without leaving any traces on the system
    2.Dont mess with system files (e.g. winsock settings like new.net does)
    3.Dont deliberatly hide or obfusicate the processes, dlls and files that belong to the spyware program
    4.Be open about what the program does and what it sends back.
    and 5.Dont try and get your program installed on a users machine without their permission (installing alongside other software is fine if its clear that installing x program installs y adware too)

  45. TRUE American? Not Hardly by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1, Insightful

    He is what I view as the embodiment of what it means to be a TRUE American. A genuine good-guy who isn't afraid to stand up for what's right...

    Ah, yes. So, say, attempting to use lawsuits to enforce policy you can't pass legislatively (probably because it infringes upon fundamental human rights) is what a TRUE American does? Hint: check out http://daily.nysun.com/Repository/getFiles.asp?Sty le=OliveXLib:ArticleToMail&Type=text/html&Path=NYS /2003/06/30&ID=Ar00601 for the story.)

    ...and fuck everyone who doesn't like it.

    Including the legislature, and, presumably, the constituency that elected them, right? In fact, the legislature is so appalled at his idea that they're considering legislation to make what he did illegal.

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  46. PLEASE let FunWebProducts be next by EtherAlchemist · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I seriously hope this is the first in a long series of lawsuits against companies that pull this kind of shit. FunWebProducts should be the next on the list, I've heard more complaints against their crapware than nearly anything else.

    <inflamatory sentence> FunWebProducts, if you don't know, are the makers of those Smiley Central things you see ads for plastered on every site using bottom feeder ad-sales services.</inflamatory sentence>

    Aside from being spyware and hard for the average user to remove, their apps also pollute the hell out of my [company's] logs and their toolbar plugin makes corrupt requests to pages we don't even have. The best we can figure is that some mechanism is "guessing" what URLs would be the best for the user. That or it's trying to spider our site following the user's trails.

    I admit I have a personal bias in case you couldn't figure that out ;) but products like these are bad for the user, bad for sites the user visits, and bad for the software (especially freeware, remember that word?) industry as a whole. They make it hard for anyone to really trust the software they want to download and use is free of spy and adware.

    --
    R(k)
  47. Intermix aka eUniverse aka flowgo.com aka ... by gorbachev · · Score: 2, Informative

    Intermix Media changed names from eUniverse last summer.

    That name is more familiar from a lot of spam, as they operate the flowgo.com / smilepop.com spam networks.

    Once scum, always scum, I guess.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  48. Re:How do you know if youre a GNU/Linux zealot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heh. I'm a mac fag that knows a considerable deal about teh computars. I'll be sure to write "CLEANS ME" on my shower, and "FUCKS ME" on my girlfriend. Nice troll, moron.

  49. Re:dot dot dot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Forgot the ol' "Post Anonymously" tick box aye? Bye bye Karma.

  50. wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And I thought this thing was a pain in the butt to get ridd of.

    http://u.urllogic.com/content/download/i282.exe

  51. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Damn that Jewey bastard for trying to combat (hah!) gun violence that causes the death of over 30,000 people a year! Fortunately, gun totin' whackos have a pretty good bead on our elected officials, otherwise some sane legislation that both protects people's right to own weapons (you know, as part of a well-regulated militia) and keeps guns out of the hands of dealers that sell semi-automatic weapons out of the back of their truck to anyone may have been passed at some point.

    I suggest you find out what other Horrible Acts he has perpretrated! Truly, he is the worst of the worst.

  52. Their contact info by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (310) 215-1001 EXT: 258

    Kevin's Cell: 714 553 3699

  53. Spitzer for president! by ph4s3 · · Score: 1

    If this man doesn't mess up his rise to fame, I see U.S. Atty General in his future. And quite possibly a run at the head job itself.

    And even though I'm a card carrying libertarian, I would vote for that democrat any day of the week over anyone else. He has single handedly (well, his office really) done more for corporate governance and securities fraud than 50 state legislatures and the US Congress, while effectively telling anyone in his way to fuck off. Now the insurance industry (AIG) is in his warpath as well as predatory lenders. It's about damned time we see the power of the courts used by someone doing The Right Thing (tm).

    1. Re:Spitzer for president! by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I do hope you are right but I have doubts for the political career of anyone that pisses off the banks as much as Spitzer did.

  54. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    He is using the legal system to carry out his convictions. What's wrong with that?

    --
    evil is as evil does
  55. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by deglr6328 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry I don't regularly get my news from that bastion of journalistic integrity the NY Sun *cough tabloid*cough*

    Spitzer is the ATTORNEY GENERAL of NY. It is not his job to write and push bills through the legistlature. It IS his job to enforce the laws of NY state and he is doing a damn good job if you ask me. Also, if "the legislature is so appalled at his idea", why have I heard absolutely nothing to that effect in the past two years since that particular issue has even been talked about?

    A visit to your website reveals your One True Righteous Crusade to apparently be concealed carry gun laws and their preservation. Aparently when you saw Spitzer took some action which was even remotely anti-gun, you decided he must be evil. You offer an interesting study on the irrational, complete black or white mindset of so many people. Do I completely agree with every last syllable uttered by the guy? No certainly not. But, shockingly enough, I am able to make the rational, sane assessment that he's doing a lot of good and is therefore worthy of my support even though he may not agree with me on the minutia of every last issue I'm interested in. See how that works? It's what we call a small logical compromise. Furthermore I actually live in New York, YOU seem to live in Oklahoma. Why do you even care? Ohhh right, because you're irrationally fixated with single issue zealotry. shame, that.

    --
    - "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"
  56. A little bit about the law... by psaindon · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think you're missing one of the biggest advantages of civil litigation over criminal litigation: burden of proof. In criminal litigation you have to prove a crime beyond a reasonable doubt. In civil litigation you only have to do a "preponderance of the evidence" standard which means more likely than not. That's a lot easier to convince someone on. Also a lot of these laws only provide for civil remedies. That means suing is the way to make change. And really that isn't such a bad thing since all that you get additionally with criminal law is throwing the executives in jail, and that won't change the company. And don't forget one of the biggest obsticles to successfully suing companies like this have been their user agreements. You are giving up serious legal rights when you click ok, and those things you agree to are enforceable against you. If you agree to spyware, they have done nothing wrong besides being a jerk. The reason it is trespass is because that is where unauthorized computer use falls. Judges like to do it because they can draw more analogies that way to help them decide things. The name really doesn't mean what it seems like it should. And last of all, there is nothign questionable as far as the illegality of copying music. But the government isn't the ones suing those people, it's the RIAA so it's not like they would sue more spammers if those people weren't brought to trial.

  57. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by Zebidiah · · Score: 1

    Out of interest; what blocker were you using?

  58. Hmm, who wants to bet by presidentbeef · · Score: 1

    that Mr. Spitzer got some spyware on his computer, went down to the ol' computer repair shop, and suddenly found out about this spyware thing?

    Or something along those lines. I don't know how many times at work I say, "Yes, you have some spy/ad ware on your computer" and I get a blank look and a "What is that?"

    This is one of those things that just needs to be recognized by the right person. Luckily, these finally ticked off someone who can do something about it.

    --
    Everything I need to know about copyrights I learned from Slashdot.
    1. Re:Hmm, who wants to bet by fistfullast33l · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, I work at the NYS Attorney General's Office. While I can't speak for Mr. Spitzer, I can say that the Legal Technology office that runs the Attorney General's Office network keeps its computers locked tighter than any place I've ever seen.

      They use Wake-On-LAN to even control when a computer is booted. Even better, most of their tech support happens without them leaving their office (which is 20 minutes drive away from the actual capitol, I might add). They are definitely an excellent marketing case for Novell and their ZEN Network products. Everything is locked down remotely. I can't install software on my own PC, I can't even see the hard drive or find a DOS prompt. Even better, they lock down the file share so tight you have to fill out 3 forms just to get write access to a shared folder.

      It's tougher than hell to get spyware on your computer. And when it does happen, their first reaction is to wipe the computer. That's right, they give you a five-second chance to remove anything from your desktop (you don't even have access to My Documents in Windows; they're reasoning is that you should use the file share instead) and then they just launch the reformat and reimage remotely and in an hour, you have a fresh new install.

      Even Internet Explorer and Netscape are managed through Zen so you can't have access to anything until the network is done authenticating. For a bureacracy as large and NY State, I was very surprised to see how well run this place is.

  59. Re:Spyware? Obligatory by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

    The secret is to make them think your dead!
    Posting from FreeBSD 5.3-RELEASE-p2/Firefox 1.0.3 :D

    Seriously though, spy/ad/mal-ware can be avoided to a great extent by knowledgeable users and safe browsing habits.

    Security issues and vulnerabilities in Windows raises the likelyhood of becoming a victim and raises the level of user competence required to keep a net connected Windows PC usable for a given amount of time.

    Both the time involved in user education and the shortened time of usability before cleaning/reformating is necessary increases cost.

    These costs, both to individuals and, possibly more importantly, to corporations is IMHO the main driving force for this. It also doesn't hurt Spitzers' image that he's also getting favorable press from the online community as well.

    A no-brainer for Spitzer..stomp on these parasites and get kudos from potential campaign contributors both individual and corporate and a ton of name recognition. Not saying his motivations are purely a plan to prep him for a future run for office, but it is convenient for him to be able to do something good and increase his chances at gaining office all in one fell swoop.

    Cheers!

    Strat

    --
    Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  60. Re:Two words - BAD IDEA - exploitable VMWARE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its a bad idea of yours because VMWARE is not an emulator and therefore allows properly designed exploits to escape and take root.

    exploits have been published in the past for vmware under linux !!!!

    the ONLY safe way to do your idea is by using BOCHS emulator and not VMWARE

    an emulator cannot normally ever be exploited by the code it interprets.

  61. Spyware undermines productivity? by RPoet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    'Spyware and adware are more than an annoyance,' Spitzer said. 'These fraudulent programs foul machines, undermine productivity and in many cases frustrate consumers' efforts to remove them from their computers.'

    Why do I so often see spyware being framed like this? I've read many articles in the popular press about spyware. They always say that you should remove spyware because such software can make your computer slower.

    Hello? It's called spyware. It's sitting there spying on you, for God's sake, and your only worry is supposed to be that your computer is slower than it should be? Are people really that indifferent to their personal privacy these days? Why aren't people outraged that some program has sneaked itself into their system and is now sniffing all of their network traffic?

    --
    "Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
    1. Re:Spyware undermines productivity? by Amelia+G · · Score: 1

      OT, but I love your sig. So apt to this particular thread.

      --
      chick-in-charge at Blue Blood
  62. Profit from pain by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Insightful
    You're obviously not making $50 a pop removing spyware from the computers of idiots.

    Thank God for unregulated free enterprise. Bring back lead-based paint and cars that explode when you rear-end them!

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:Profit from pain by Speare · · Score: 1

      "See, there's a warning right on the label - 'Invisible Pedestrian, NOT FOR BLIND KIDS.'" -- Dan Aykroyd, SNL

      --
      [ .sig file not found ]
  63. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 4, Insightful

    why have I heard absolutely nothing to that effect in the past two years since that particular issue has even been talked about?

    I would guess that it's because those issues aren't your particular field of interest. There's so much going on that it's impossible to keep up with everything; this happens to be one of my particular interests. The bill numbers are H.R. 800 and S. 397, The Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms act, and you can find them on http://thomas.loc.gov. Your accusation of zealotry is misguided, BTW; you might be surprised to learn that I actually argued against the act, because I believe that it represents an improper intrusion of the Federal government into state matters, specifically the states' right to sue whom they choose. As usual, Dr. Ron Paul expresses my objections more eloquently than I can. You can read his explanation--and the NRA's disapproval--at http://www.inlibertyandfreedom.com/rp1036.htm. That said, I do think such suits are without merit (as has every single court that has heard one, I might add).

    I care not because of single-issue zealotry; while his actions actually could affect me (by driving up costs), that's not the primary reason for my concern. I care because I'm opposed to government using the courts to achieve those ends which it cannot achieve legislatively. I am particularly concerned where such ends are achieved by lawsuit and driving companies out of business (or making continued operations economically unviable); typically, when such measures are taken, it is because there is no justification in legislation, or because such legislation would be either unconstitutional, or rejected by constituents. His job being the enforcement of existing law, it is inappropriate for him to be engaging in lawsuits against lawful manufacturers of lawful products because of the unlawful actions of end users. As a parallel, would it be appropriate if he filed suit against Ford for the actions of drunk drivers?

    As for your crusade comment: I'm going to let that one stand, because it's pretty close. I do take exception to the "one true righteous" part, though. My crusade, my passion, is not concealed carry, or even gun rights in general; rather, it's my right to live without unnecessary meddling or interference from my government. I speak out not only on my own behalf, but on behalf of anybody who has been abused at the hands of government. I am a frequent critic of President Bush, AG Gonzales (I swear, I never though I'd actually miss Ashcroft, but Gonzales is actually worse), the DEA, ONDCP, FBI, and pretty much every other government agency. Mr. Spitzer's lawsuits represent an intrusion into lawful commerce that serves as an unwelcome precedent: that the government can hold producers accountable for the actions of end-users, actions over which they have no control. See also: filesharing software. I have consistently opposed RIAA/MPAA efforts, along with the DMCA (and similar), to hold the software authors and service providers accountable for the actions of their users. Why? Because the authors have no control over who uses their software to do what; without control, neither can there be responsibility. Mr. Spitzer is a particularly apropos target for criticism in this matter, though, because these lawsuits were his brainchild--he is, effectively, the leader of that effort, and just as President Bush is the leader of many of our truly offensive policy decisions ("enemy combatants" and the USA PATRIOT Act being perhaps two of the most egregious), and therefore deserving of extra criticism, so does Mr. Spitzer deserve the criticism on this issue.

    Single-issue zealotry? The issue is freedom, and I don't think it's irrational at all. My comment was not to paint Mr. Spitzer as a villain, but rather to respond to your (apparent) characterization of him as a hero. I appreciate what he's done for us--for all of us, even those of

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  64. Great business model for the unscrupulous by OceanDiver · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ever wondered why you see so many banners for screensavers wherever you go on the Internet?

    These people pour in several hundreds thousand dollars per month into advertisement for "free" screensavers! Even though the cost of acquisition may be up to $2-3 per installation, they can still make a couple of million a month from selling the souls and registration data of the poor gullible old ladies installing these things. Not to mention giving them a healthy does of adware/spyware for additional profit.

    Unfortunately, Intermix is not even the worst, there are bigger players on the market. This kind of heavy marketing makes it quite tough for us honest small developers to compete, and it even hurts us by scaring away people who got their fingers burnt already.

    Go on Spitzer!

    --
    www.oceandive.com
  65. Intermix? by dangitman · · Score: 1
    Homer: This industry moves so fast it's really hard to tell. That's why I need a name that's cutting-edge, like CutCo, EdgeCom, InterSlice... come on, Marge, you're good at these! Help me out!

    Marge: How about... CompuGlobalHyperMegaNet?

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  66. Three words ! by TractorBarry · · Score: 2, Informative

    And don't forget Sysinternals (many thanks to the Slashdotter who originally clued me up on them)

    Their Process Explorer is what the Windows Task Manager should have been. Not only does it show you ALL the running processes but you can kill ANY of them (none of this crap where Windows says "Sorry that's a system process you can't kill it" WTF ? I'm logged in as adminstrator I'll kill what I bloody well want to thankyou very much)

    So if you're gutting spyware out of a box then I'd first use this to kill off any superfluous daemon processes, then run Adaware and Spybot S& D, then manually check and clean the registry start up keys, then remove all temp files in windows and internet caches, then look for ".hta" files, ".bat" files. win.ini entries etc. etc.

    Of course after doing this a couple of times you'll simply give up, install Linux, and wonder why you ever bothered trying to use something as retarded as Windows ?

    I don't know about you but I didn't get into computing so I could spend all my time patching holes in a poorly designed O/S (If I wanted to do that I'd write my own poorly designed O/S) I actually wanted to use my computer to do stuff.

    --
    Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
  67. "False Advertising" would be enough by itself by Moraelin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Frankly, "free" means "free". If I gave away a non-computer product, say a t-shirt, if I advertise it as "free", you'd expect it to be actually "free".

    If it worked you would not expect that "free" means, buried 6 ft deep in the EULA, that I can come to your house, listen to your phone conversations, shout ads under your windows, switch your TV channels and read your mail. That's just not what "free" means. And if any company tried to pull that stunt, they'd have a fraudulent advertising lawsuit on their hands... or worse.

    Yet when it comes to software, you see this kind of crap every day.

    And not even just from small time slimeballs. Last time I've bothered installing RealPlayer (years ago, as it just had renamed it to Real One), it acted every bit as annoying as any spyware. It stayed in RAM even when told not to, drowned me in pop-ups even when not using the player, etc.

    About time someone sues these idiots and brings back _some_ truth in advertising.

    I wouldn't even mind it if they explicitly called it ad-supported-software or whatever. But calling it free, when in fact you have to give them something in exchange (e.g., control over your computer) is just the kind of bullshit that shouldn't have ever been allowed in the first place-

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  68. My, aren't we a in a bad mood today? by CaptainZapp · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Although it's undeniable that Mr. Spitzer seems a bit overzealous at times I venture that there where no indictments due to the fact that the wrongdoers settled for 100s Millions of $.

    A major investment bank does not just through that kind of money away if they don't have a damn good reason to believe that they lose if it ever goes to court.

    Mr. Spitzers motives might be of dubious nature, but it's undeniable that he's responsible that wrongdoers, frauds, cheats and other vermin on a very large corporate scale paid major money due to his efforts.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

    1. Re:My, aren't we a in a bad mood today? by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      'throw'.

      You may call me a spelling nazi today, but you'll thank me when you use the proper spelling in work related communication.

    2. Re:My, aren't we a in a bad mood today? by CaptainZapp · · Score: 1
      No worries, mate. English is my second language and sometimes I'm guilty of word-confusion with phonetically equal words.

      Thanks for pointing it out.

      --
      ich bin der musikant

      mit taschenrechner in der hand

      kraftwerk

    3. Re:My, aren't we a in a bad mood today? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Call me a pronunciation Nazi but "throw" and "through" are not phonetically equal words.

      Your sentence, as written, confused me for a few seconds...

    4. Re:My, aren't we a in a bad mood today? by Flendon · · Score: 1

      Add in the slightest bit of an accent and yes they are. But since he isn't a native english speaker its obvious he wouldn't have this problem...

      --
      chown -R us ./base
  69. Elliot Spitzer...the last honest man on earth by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    This guy is like GOD, he is all-powerful and can bring anyone to their knees.
    Will he start suing Microsoft and AOL for spying on us as well?

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  70. i282.exe = Trojan horse TR/Dldr.Qoologi.I.4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    if(writer.age15 && writer.company.value>5)
    {
    prison.sentence=null;
    profit++
    }

  71. Being a NY resident... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can say that Spitzer is one of the last public servents with true integrity

  72. Re:How do you know if youre a GNU/Linux zealot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You call Apple users gay while only having male aquaintances yourself.
    Just discribed the vast majority of Microsoft supporters. Not that there are that many.

    You have heard of this word 'shower' and seen one of these appliances one or two times but as yet have never used one.
    Every Neoludite. To thies people Microsoft is the satan and GNU is a conspericy.

    You were beaten up at school and in all honesty you know you deserved it.
    That would be the author of the parent post.

    You understand memory paging and can discuss the pros and cons of RISC v CISC but do not know how to change a car tyre.
    Even I can spell tire. I don't brag about my spelling and honnestly I'm on the receaving end of a spelling flame more often than not but for the love of cheese check your post before hitting submit.

    You believe every word should be prefixed with "GNU/", "G" or "K" and be a recursive acronym
    That would be the PR director of the company that makes Linux.
    (Yeah yeah I know this guy probably believes a company made Linux)

    You mistakenly think your mother loves you.
    Some how I can't help by think this is a cry for help.

    Ok so your crying for help here is my advice.
    Stop using Elisa for psycological advice and get a REAL psycologist.
    Next buy a Macintosh. Usually it's BS to say someone is to stupid to use Linux. But in your case it's actually true. Your to stupid to use ANY computer but split the diffrence and get a Mac. If you can not afford that there is a brand new PalmOs based laptop for only $500 however PalmOs isn't self contained so you'll have to have your friends install software for you but with your brain damage you should let them do that anyway.

    As far as open source. Maybe you should stay way from it. Commertal software is writen for people who can not cross the road with out help and that is you.

  73. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by Communomancer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I care because I'm opposed to government using the courts to achieve those ends which it cannot achieve legislatively.

    Well, oppose whatever you want, and I'll sit here feeling sick and tired of folks who think that the courts are somehow a "lesser" branch of government. I don't remember reading that anywhere in the Constitution.

    What I do remember are checks, balances, and whatnot. You say the state legislature is now considering changing the law? Good. That's how it's supposed to work.

    --
    "UNIX" is never having to say you're sorry.
  74. The Marting Act - The A-Bomb Of Financial Lawsuits by maxconfus · · Score: 5, Informative
    If I was Intermix, I would be nervous. Spitzer the NY AG is able to go after this California company using what is called the Martin Act.
    The push of the Martin Act is to arm the New York attorney general to combat financial fraud. It empowers him to subpoena any document he wants from anyone doing business in the state; to keep an investigation totally secret or to make it totally public; and to choose between filing civil or criminal charges whenever he wants. People called in for questioning during Martin Act investigations do not have a right to counsel or a right against self-incrimination. Combined, the act's powers exceed those given any regulator in any other state. Now for the scary part: To win a case, the AG doesn't have to prove that the defendant intended to defraud anyone, that a transaction took place, or that anyone actually was defrauded. Plus, when the prosecution is over, trial lawyers can gain access to the hoards of documents that the act has churned up and use them as the basis for civil suits. "It's the legal equivalent of a weapon of mass destruction," said a lawyer at a major New York firm who represents defendants in Martin Act cases (and who didn't want his name used because he feared retribution by Spitzer). "The damage that can be done under the statute is unlimited."
    I agree with the lawsuit against intermix. Sneak software installs and that very annoying FlowGo email newsletter suck. If fraud can be established then whether it occurred on the Internet or over the phone or in the cash register at the local grocery store then it should be put down. On the other hand, I am not sure how much better I feel knowing what the martin act can do. Although, I doubt Spitzer would have been able to stop Wall Street dead in its tracks without the Martin.
    --
    A hand up and a foot on every chest...
  75. RTFP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    see subject.

  76. Trespass by samldanach · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One of the things that caught my attention was that Spitzer was charging them with trespass, under the common law definition. This has two interesting ramifications. First, that programs running on your computer are considered to be on your property. The precedent that this sets is non-trivial. Does it mean that damage to data on your computer can be covered by your homeowner's insurance? Is it still considered to be trespass when it's on a laptop, connected at a hotspot outside your home? And, what ramifications does that have for your online presence? If the spyware is trespassing on my property, am I considered to be on a business' property when I'm visiting their site? Can I sue the business for giving me the spyware, in the same way you can sue someone for inadequate physical safety precautions? Also, the application of common law to spyware is interesting. Essentially, that's saying, "This is obviously against the spirit of the law, even though it isn't covered by a specific law to date." (Yes, the concept of common law is significantly more complex, but I'm a geek, not a lawyer.) Given that online threats are evolving far faster than any legislature can keep up with, this might be an interesting precedent for still prosecuting, or at least suing, those who perpetrate such threats.

  77. Pedantic code commentary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Won't compile - you forgot the ; after profit++

  78. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by greenrd · · Score: 1
    Not to insult your intelligence, but... are you sure the alerts weren't just about cookies? Cookies aren't spyware - they aren't even software.

  79. Re:How do you know if youre a GNU/Linux zealot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All to hell with it.

    > You call Apple users gay while only having male aquaintances yourself.
    All Homophobia aside.
    The Macintosh bashing predates Linux by about a decade. It was encuraged by Microsoft shortly after the Macintosh was introduced to the market.
    First the "Macintosh vs Dos" arguments then later the "Mac vs Windows" arguments.
    Sereously Unix people were pro-Macintosh.
    The vast majority of GNU/Linux users were comming from Dos or Windows and with it all the Mac bashing psycobable that came pacaged with every Microsoft product. The rest of the GNU community actually liked the Mac in consept but objected to the "Look and feel" patent.

    Former Dos/Windows now Linux users simply never used the Macintosh and actually bought into the BS from Microsoft about how it's just the nature of GUIs.
    They were aware of how much the Microsoft GUI sucked and as such thought it was equally true of the Macintosh.

  80. Protect the Public by knight37 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Intermix: Oh, we use only the finest juicy chunks of fresh screen savers, emptied, steamed, flavoured with games, whipped into a personal information manager, and garnished with spyware.
    Spitzer: SPYWARE?!?!?
    I: Correct.
    S: It doesn't say anything here about spyware!
    I: Ah, it does, at the bottom of the EULA, after "rights you agree to relinquish".
    S: I hardly think that's good enough! I think it's be more appropriate if the box bore a great red label: "WARNING: SPYWARE!!!"
    I: Our sales would plummet!
    S: (screaming)FUCK your sales! We're here to protect the PUBLIC!

    --
    Knight37 - Once a Gamer, Always a Gamer
  81. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by Felinoid · · Score: 1

    Salons lacks journalistic credability and the artical on Salon can only complain about the editorials.
    The editorials in any give newspaper are the editor or publishers opinions. Salon should know this by now.

    As far as Spitzer, There may be issues he shouldn't be taking on becouse they are issues that need to be addressed with new laws not exsisting laws. There is a problem in government today called "Legislating from the bench".
    However give Spitzer some lattatude here. The problem with "Legislating from the bench" is you have unelected officals creating law. Spitzer is an elected offical and represents how the people of NY wish the laws to be enforced.
    Besides Spitzer isn't in a possition to create law even from the bench. He isn't a judge and ultimately has no say in the matter.

    From what I can see he is doing what I think should be done. Using existing law to address existing issues instead of creating newer more restrictive laws.
    That IS his job.

    --
    I don't actually exist.
  82. Advertiser lists -- my prior work by bedelman · · Score: 1

    I've written about this on multiple occasions. Some links:

    Claria/Gator: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/edelman/ads/ga tor/gator-customers.html

    eXact Advertising: http://www.benedelman.org/spyware/exact-advertiser s

  83. Spitzer for President by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    almost makes up for the devious, ulterior motivated, power hungry, cow-towing to the funda-mentally retarded base bunch of f*** ups we have running our country into the trash bin of history right now.

  84. traffic violations are crime by bluGill · · Score: 1

    Traffic violations are crime. Read the laws. If you don't like it vote for someone who will make it legal to park in front of a fire hydrant and eliminate the speed limit.

    Yes, traffic violations are the most common crimes, and likely the most profitable. They are generally minor compared to "read" crime. They are still crime though.

  85. It is called generics, and it is good practice by bluGill · · Score: 1

    In programing we have this concept of generics. Make your program as generic as you can so it can handle things like a different tax rate.

    Laws use the same concept. Why write a wiretap law that only applies to your personal phone, a slightly different one that applies to your computer, and still another one for your cable modem. (And note that wifi internet is not covered above) You can instead write a generic tresspass law that applies to land, and computers. Go through a few iterations of debugging and you might even come up with a law that covers all the cases correctly.

  86. In an alternate universe.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Eliot Spitzer would have been nominated as U.S. Attorney General during Al Gore's first term in office. Then, maybe, the Patriot Act would have been more legitimately /patriotic./

  87. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by cdrguru · · Score: 1
    Sorry, guns are here. You can suppress people from buying guns legally, but you can't ever stop people buying, selling and trading guns illegally.

    You go into a bar in Chicago and say "I want to buy a gun" and three people will come up to you and say "How much you got?". This is on Sunday afternoon - if you do this on Friday night you are likely to get hustled out of the bar with several people saying "Not so loud" - because they want your sale rather than their competitors getting it.

    Do you think there is a "Brady" waiting period for these sales? How about a background check? Forget it. There are so many guns being imported into the US today from Eastern Europe and China that it would take an army to just go around and collect them all up.

    Sound a bit like drugs? Exactly - what do the people buying guns illegally have in common with drug dealers? Often, they are the same people.

    Gun control is for idiots. Somehow, people in the US have it in their heads that they should be able to shoot people, and regardless of how illegal it is to do so, it is going to happen. Removing legal guns just eliminates any hope you might have of defending yourself. Ask someone about how it is going in England sometime. Lots of gun control, lots of illegal guns too.

  88. Capitalisation Nazi with a big 'N' by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

    No worries, mate. English is my second language and sometimes I'm guilty of word-confusion with phonetically equal words. Thanks for pointing it out.

    Don't feel bad about it; if the guy was picking holes in your spelling, he ought to have realised that 'nazi' should have been capitalised. (^_^)

    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  89. Re:TRUE American? Not Hardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can suppress people from buying guns legally, but you can't ever stop people buying, selling and trading guns illegally.

    Hmm, make it so guns must be registered to an individual. All gun sales must be made legal by transfer of a bill-of-sale via a government agency. Sorta like the DMV. Stiff federal crimes for possessing an illegal firearm (they can use file trading, hacking and violating copyrights as baseline penalties). Of course there would have to be a grace period of a fair number of years until all -- what is it? 100+ million guns? -- are properly registered. But all new gun sales would have to meet the requirement immediately.

    Ask someone about how it is going in England sometime. Lots of gun control, lots of illegal guns too.

    Number of gun deaths from firearms United Kingdom 163 (year 2003). Number of gun deaths from firearms United States: 29737 (year 2002), a little more than half are suicides. Yes, I see your point. No, wait, I don't.

    The United States has the highest per capita gun death rate of any semi-civilised country. Can't understand that? Here's pretty graphs for you.

    Removing legal guns just eliminates any hope you might have of defending yourself.

    Yes, yes. When the criminal calls you out into the middle of main street, all you have to do is be quicker on the draw. That is such bullshit. That legally owned gun is more likely to be used to kill your spouse when you get angry, or to kill your kid when he/she gets too curious all alone in daddy's closet. Of course, that leaves the best use of the gun for yourself... right temple, please.

  90. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

    I wish I could remember, it was a comercial package from mcaffee or norton or some such that the customer had purchased a few days before, but waited till I got her system cleaned before installing it.
    I mostly remember it because I have a friend or two who watch wrestling (that they quite cheerfully call 'soap opera for men') and I called to warn the one shortly after as he's not very computer literate and it was exacltly the sort of site he'd stop by to see if he could get info on next weeks script or something.
    I also remember the number of items because I was having to explain the difference between the various types of malware as well as what a cookie was and so on and pointed to those items in the list 'these are the same ones I just cleaned off your computer'.
    Sorry if my memory is a bit vague, this was last winter right around christmass, and with all the new computers people bought then infected over said holiday it kinda blurrs a bit.

    Mycroft

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  91. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

    Nope, not cookies. I know the difference between cookies, popups trojans worms and viruses and even know the difference between a hacker and a cracker :). (though obviously there where a bunch of those as well, from the usual suspects as well).
    Been at this a while, first virus I ever dealt with came via a 5.25" floppy and infected a doss 4.0 system with a 15 meg rll hard-drive.
    No offence taken, I've met people who called thier case 'the cpu' or 'the hard drive' and were utterly convinced they downloaded the whole internet and it ran on thier home computer (why else would intell tell them a faster cpu sped up thier internet).

    Mycroft

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  92. Re:Spyware is hell (but pays to clean up after) by Zebidiah · · Score: 1

    Thank you for taking the trouble to reply. Zebidiah