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Windows Defender Will Soon Start Removing Applications With Coercive Messaging: Cleaners and Optimizers Put on Notice (cso.com.au)

Microsoft is stepping up its efforts to protect Windows users from programs that use fear to convince people to buy or upgrade products. From a report: The Redmond company is taking aim at all software that use scary messaging to convince people to upgrade to a paid product that purportedly fixes a problem detected by a free version. Specifically it is targeting registry cleaners and optimizers, which Microsoft previously didn't endorse but also didn't blacklist them as unwanted programs or malware. That's changing on March 1. "We find this practice problematic because it can pressure customers into making unnecessary purchase decisions," said Barak Shein, a member of the Windows Defender security research team. From March 1 Microsoft's Windows Defender and other security products will "classify programs that display coercive messages as unwanted software, which will be detected and removed," Shein said.

112 comments

  1. Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's start with that and see where it takes us.

    1. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... it's going to remove software I knowingly and willfully installed? I'm sorry, but I don't want a company deciding what I'm allowed to run.

    2. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by DarkRookie · · Score: 2

      That is the question.
      The OS does the same thing as these pieces of software.

      --
      The millennial that doesn't like most of the stuff designed for millennials.
    3. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There. That is the real problem Microsoft is solving.

    4. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by BenFranske · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, you're not the target audience and are probably not going to be installing shady registry cleaners and system optimization utilities anyway. Are you also saying we as a society shouldn't try and shut down sketchy con-artist retailers because you're not stupid enough to fall for what they're selling and should be able to waste your money if you want to? Sometimes there are larger social issues at work than just you. You can always turn off Windows Defender if you don't like what it's doing...or run another OS if you prefer.

    5. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm wondering if MS is going to use it to blacklist apps like Spybot Antibeacon

    6. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      It will be absolutely hilarious if someone offended by this takes legal action that results in some sort of anti-competition ruling against Microsoft for penalising other coercive messaging software but not its own.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    7. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't Microsoft's job to police my PC or any PC, or remove software I willfully installed.

      You sound like the kind of turd that volunteered to be a hall monitor.

    8. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free Speech!!!11!!11!!!

    9. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He literally just said that you probably aren't the target audience, you nincompoop

    10. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...or ANY PC.

    11. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You could always disable Windows Defender. It will see those trash programs as Malware and if you don't like it, you have the option to disable it.

    12. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Falos · · Score: 0

      And policing security patches on MUH PC isn't their job either.

      You don't have to run safety updates, and you don't have to use Windows Defender.

      Stop shooting strawmen only you built, and stop being a whiny bitch.

    13. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It should. The latest updates that got downloaded on my dedicated Windows 10 microdesktop (bought with W10 pro) in my observatory announced that 'windows is a service and installing updates is required'... after installing the updates (as usual... what changed is a surprise left for the user to discover. The other PC is running W7.. was on W10 but the updates kept removing the USB device drivers for observatory equipment and replacing it with a 'newer' generic that knew nothing about the gear. Think they are confused about why people have computers -- not just for playing games.

    14. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Khyber · · Score: 2

      " was on W10 but the updates kept removing the USB device drivers for observatory equipment and replacing it with a 'newer' generic that knew nothing about the gear."

      Is your IT staff so incompetent as to not know that you use the "have disk" driver update option and point specifically to the .inf file to force usage of drivers other than generics, since this has kinda been the standard since XP?

      Right-click start button>Device Manager>Imaging Devices>right-click your observatory equipment (since you're just using a digital telescope, right?)>Update Driver software>Browse My Computer for Driver>Let me Pick from a list of device drivers>Have Disk.

      Bam, now your stuff will show up. You might have to disable driver signature enforcement (which requires you to rebot first before installing the driver) but it works, and always has worked, since XP.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    15. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by rogoshen1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You can always turn off Windows Defender if you don't like what it's doing

      For now.

      The windows update bullshit shows where they'd like to go with this. Start small, get users accustomed to the 'user experience improvements', then continually encroach.
      But basically, MS wants to control your computer, and turn it into a conveyance for advertising, or into a platform for gathering data-- er.. sorry, telemetry about you and your computing habits.

      Because one Google was not enough for this world.

    16. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by CaptainDork · · Score: 4, Funny

      And answer the goddam phone.

      I called 7 times and left 4 messages, "Hi, this is Windows. I be calling you sir to tell that virus infect computer. Allow me to connect long distance and removing infected for $89 dollaros, US, please or your license will escape."

      --
      It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
    17. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Observatory control PC? this is kind of one of the few acceptable use cases for Windows 10 LTSB (it's the replacement for windows embedded - not CE - with the whole slew of FS filter drivers, kiosk parts, etc. Basically for industrial control, embedded systems, ATMs, etc. anything you wouldn't do general purpose web browsing/office/gaming tasks on. ).

      Whoever set up that PC is an idiot and needs to talk to your IT department.

    18. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      No, but I'll bet cash money it removes things you actually want, that compete with a Miscreant-o-soft product.

    19. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's probably a problem related to duplicate VID/PID stuff and the OS thinks it has a matching driver that doesn't work. New update -> new driver version of false match -> replaced. Boo.

    20. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We have discovered an issue with your shift key. This can be repaired by downloading a copy of our Shift Key Adjuster software. This is a subscription service available today only for $9.95 per year. The regular price is $14.95. Please hurry and take advantage of this amazing offer!!!

    21. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by BenFranske · · Score: 1

      But basically, MS wants to control your computer, and turn it into a conveyance for advertising, or into a platform for gathering data-- er.. sorry, telemetry about you and your computing habits.

      Maybe, that's what alternative operating systems are for. Trust me I'm right in line to raise a ruckus if something like only allowing signed operating systems on your PC (ala some of the UEFI proposals) but it's not like there aren't alternative OS choices here. If Microsoft wants to make Windows into a cesspool of advertising so be it.

    22. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft has already shown that it is willing to do anything and everything they can to control your computer and your information. That requires them to be able to dictate what you can and cannot do on your PC, and they have been attempting to increase their influence in this area. Even if this isn't where they try that, it would be a surprise if they didn't attempt it at some other point in time.

      It is bad for Microsoft's long-term strategy to allow individual citizens to continue to control the computers they purchased, not to mention bad for the long-term strategy of the RIAA, MPAA, and... well, just about anyone who you don't want controlling you.

      It puzzles me that Windows 10 advocates never seem to address the issues this sort of thing raises, not to mention the spyware tactics (among many other problems), and instead sidestep the issue with insults. It is particularly revealing, however, when they say with one breath that everyone hates Linux or alternative OS's and how horrible they are, and then with another say you always have an alternative if you don't like what Windows 10 is doing.

    23. Re: Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't Microsoft's job to police my PC or any PC, or remove software I willfully installed.

      That is all nice and well.
      Except that Windows will gladly install software that you didn't want.
      When you try to remove it it will respond with "I'm sorry Dave, I can't let you do that."

    24. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Damn right, so we can't have that. This town is only big enough for one mobster gang!

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    25. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you so incompetent that you cant fucking read.

      windows kept updating and replacing the good driver with generic shit.

      Explaining how to install a driver as a reply is fucking idiotic, it has nothing to do with that, pillock.

    26. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why goto all that fucking trouble for a simple control pc are you a fucking idiot?

      do you work for a bunch of fucking idiots paying 10x what they need to because you suggest idiotic shit like this?

    27. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      You're so incompetent that you don't realize that the generic driver installation is something done BY DEFAULT and you must manually bypass it for many device installs. Your GPU drivers actually do this, you just don't see it because its done via hidden command line execution. If the GPU drivers did not do this, when you reboot, Windows would revert to seeing your card as a plain VGA card and not give you 3D acceleration.

      You're a complete fucking moron.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    28. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Windows 10 LSTB is only available with the Enterprise version and its associated licensing. So for any small shops or home users, you are effectively locked out of using the LTSB branch (unless you pirate it).

    29. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Manually installing a driver does zero good when Windows Update decides that it has a better one and installs over it. Of course, you can always fix it, but that gets old after a while, especially since Windows Update will perpetually see the driver you are using as old and therefore wants to push its version.

      By the way, you're fucking retarded and do everyone a favor and go kill yourself.

    30. Re:Will it remove Windows 10? by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "Manually installing a driver does zero good when Windows Update decides that it has a better one and installs over it."

      When you install the way I listed above, Windows Update doesn't fuck with the driver. But morons like you wouldn't know that.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  2. Not enough by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it were me, I'd configure Windows Defender to flag all third party malware/virus remove trash as malware themselves. Snakeoil all of it. Outright theft and preying on the weak minded with fear.

    1. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows Defender needs to also flag and remove Windows 10 as malicious and coercive.

    2. Re:Not enough by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Eh, that's mostly bullshit, you're lumping all A/V or 3rd party security products with the worst offenders.

      They're all garbage. Even Windows Defender. But at least Windows Defender doesn't try to milk you for $$$.

      The best security protect available is simply training users how to identify bullshit when it comes and how to react to it.

      In my 25+ years of using computers, I have first-hand experienced ONLY ONE virus. ONE. In 25 years. The only thing I've ever seen a malware/virus scanner ever report as a problem is keygens and an IRC script, which were not really threats. That one virus did not come from a website, download, or anything like that. Some 'friend' sent me a file over an instant message program and that file was infected.

    3. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think you don't need realtime pre-access protection, that's fine.

      The reality is the vast majority of them really are crap and offer you sweet fuck all benefits. If you think your realtime pre-access protection is protecting you from targeted attacks I have a bridge to sell you.

    4. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm with you on the "general" need for A/V *IF AND ONLY IF* you have best-practice safe browsing and avoid obvious pitfalls - however that's NOT ALL WINDOWS USERS! They have to accommodate the lowest common denominators. Windows Defender is NOT COMPARABLE to high-test A/V, that's just a non-fact you're inevitably pushing by lumping them together. The fact is strong A/V doesn't cost much - you can get 1 copy/year for ~$10 usually on sale. Windows is over $100, doesn't come adequately protected by default - THE OPPOSITE IS TRUE, it's wide open by default. Strong internet security suites actually DO A LOT compared to a default install, and I've used computers for 35 years and seen about a dozen viruses on client machines from various vectors.

      Yet you want to call *ALL* A/V companies "the criminals" for offering an OPTIONAL PRODUCT that the user decides is worth their money or not? It's kinda crackheaded to ignore M$ while going after "everyone else" as a lump.

      *(Full disclosure I've made 25+ years of a living dealing with Windows based malware that M$ A/V did not catch, so please pretend it's not a real problem? lol)

    5. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently you have never worked in support. Those "garbage" third party scanners and removal tools are often one-offs for specific, brand-new threats which infect via means a user could never "identify bullshit" and react to.

    6. Re:Not enough by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 2

      I'm with you on the "general" need for A/V *IF AND ONLY IF* you have best-practice safe browsing and avoid obvious pitfalls - however that's NOT ALL WINDOWS USERS!

      Which is why I am one of those exceptionally evil people who believe you should have a license, training and certification to be allowed near ANY computer device. We require it for amateur radio, driving a car, practicing medicine, law, etc. Should need a license to use a computer too, so you know what the fuck you're doing. It's at a point where irresponsible usage of a computer HARMS OTHERS.

    7. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best security protect available is simply training users how to identify bullshit when it comes and how to react to it.

      So what you're saying is, if we remove the largest vector for attacks, there won't be successful attacks? Holy shit, slow down, I need to get a pen and paper.

      So in your 25+ years of using computers, you haven't had any whiff of the notion of just how difficult what your proposing is? That basically the industry has been trying to solve that problem for MUCH LONGER THAN 25 YEARS? You honestly, genuinely, unironically have no idea whatsoever of just how monumentally difficult and impossible that is because of the very nature of humanity?

      Yeah, AV products are shit but human behavior is even shittier. Your sample size of "one" is not representative of reality.

    8. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh, that's mostly bullshit, you're lumping all A/V or 3rd party security products with the worst offenders.

      They're all garbage. Even Windows Defender. But at least Windows Defender doesn't try to milk you for $$$.

      The best security protect available is simply training users how to identify bullshit when it comes and how to react to it.

      In my 25+ years of using computers, I have first-hand experienced ONLY ONE virus. ONE. In 25 years. The only thing I've ever seen a malware/virus scanner ever report as a problem is keygens and an IRC script, which were not really threats. That one virus did not come from a website, download, or anything like that. Some 'friend' sent me a file over an instant message program and that file was infected.

      Do you want a medal or something?

    9. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So in your 25+ years of using computers, you haven't had any whiff of the notion of just how difficult what your proposing is? That basically the industry has been trying to solve that problem for MUCH LONGER THAN 25 YEARS?

      So take notes.
      my 70yo mother know this.
      do not use Outlook. Ever.
      do not use IE if you can use another browser.
      do not play online lotteries
      do not try to search for porn or "enlarge your penis" offers.
      She does not have credit card, only ATM card.
      No online shopping.
      No online banking, no smartphone ... just candy bar phone with pre-paid
      no problem.

      Because her "pc" is running in virtual machine and she knows where to click to restore from the image that I created for her.

    10. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then also you'd advocate Windows wouldn't be a consumer product, naturally. You'd decry that WAY more than A/V, were you being realistic to your own stated values.

    11. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driveby 0-days exist that may be caught by AV updates faster than by software patches. AV still has value, even if you think it doesn't - even if you're the smartest person in the world, you could still get whacked by a bad advertisement on slashdot of all places, hell, malicious ads have been shown through google's network before.

    12. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just said Windows Defender == The top A/V - that's factually wrong, you're stating it like a fact when it's not even close. Regardless of your other point, stop emulating Trump please unless you also want to die in prison.

    13. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      windows defender doesn't have to "milk you for $$$" when windows 10 already has you by the balls whilst giving your ass a good fisting.

    14. Re:Not enough by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      If you define best-practice safe browsing as avoiding all sites that use advertising (and some are being uncooperative with AdBlock Plus), you may have a point. My wife got pwned by visiting the New York Times once.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    15. Re:Not enough by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

      So in your 25+ years of using computers, you haven't had any whiff of the notion of just how difficult what your proposing is?

      It's not difficult. You just wish it were, as do most AV vendors. Want to take notes? Cool. Don't download stuff from any sites except from the official site for the program you're interested in acquiring. Don't install stuff from unknown vendors, vet the vendor, know who's behind the program. Only visit websites that're run by companies you trust. Use an ad-blocker at all times. And for the love of god, don't click links until you LOOK at where it goes. That status bar isn't there just for shits'n'giggles. Don't open email attachments EVER, unless you have TALKED to the person who sent the attachment and are expecting it. Don't click links in emails, even if it's from a company you know. Manually go to their website yourself if the email directs you to do so.

      That basically the industry has been trying to solve that problem for MUCH LONGER THAN 25 YEARS?

      This is just silly. The industry hasn't existed for 25 years. Let's see, 2018 - 25 = 1993. So just about around the first days of websites coming online. Malware in this age was most often spread via infected 3.5" floppies, and were generally destructive in nature (wipe your HDD typically.) Destructive virus' aren't really seen much anymore because they destroy spread vectors. We haven't seen majorly destructive virus' in a long time. Basically, 1993 is probably near the first signs of virus appearing on computer systems. We hadn't even seen the first internet worm in 1993.

      People rail and rant and rave up and down about the insecurity of our computer systems, well, fucking duh? When we first designed these systems, we didn't think our fellow man would introduce destructive, malicious programs into the wild to fuck with everything. There's nothing wrong with these systems and computers, it's the fucking people that are broken. So instead of trying to fix our computers, which by the way work just fine, we should try to fix people to use the fucking things properly.

    16. Re:Not enough by eaglesrule · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So you're the exception, rather than the rule. For those in support roles for large organizations, dealing with malware is a daily occurrence. There is only so many screws to tighten security wise until users become frustrated and angry.

      Since there is no perfect security, there has to be a multi layered approach and A/V is one of these layers that provides herd immunity with hourly updates as threats are identified.

      MS providing an ineffective AV solution won't really affect their bottom line. A vendor whose business model and reputation is staked on it might approach the product differently.

    17. Re:Not enough by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1

      Regardless of your other point, stop emulating Trump please unless you also want to die in prison.

      I think invoking Trump's name is going to soon be as much as a faux pas as invoking Hitler and Nazi. Godwin's law and all that. Besides, you should've declared it as "fake news" for proper effect.

    18. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh, that's mostly bullshit, you're lumping all A/V or 3rd party security products with the worst offenders.

      They're all garbage. Even Windows Defender. But at least Windows Defender doesn't try to milk you for $$$.

      The best security protect available is simply training users how to identify bullshit when it comes and how to react to it.

      In my 25+ years of using computers, I have first-hand experienced ONLY ONE virus. ONE. In 25 years. The only thing I've ever seen a malware/virus scanner ever report as a problem is keygens and an IRC script, which were not really threats. That one virus did not come from a website, download, or anything like that. Some 'friend' sent me a file over an instant message program and that file was infected.

      ROFL,
      Me too! Unfortunately I still have it! Would you like it too? I still have an XT computer that won't boot to floppy and is stuck with Michelanglo on HD :/

      (ISO: 10MB HD......hurfy)

    19. Re:Not enough by eaglesrule · · Score: 1

      I know it is easy to put all the blame on Grandma for "holding it wrong", but software companies should take some responsibility too when they sell products where security is barely an afterthought. Paid software engineers, the 'licensed experts' if you will, gave us Adobe Flash as example and the security nightmare that it was.

    20. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a moron. People get viruses from the company they're downloading the product of all the time. Ads are another vector. Email is the big one.

      Take notes faggot, you haven't solved any of these problems for end users of MS windows. You just have your head up your ass.

    21. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With respect

      one virus you know about.

    22. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my 25+ years of using computers, I have first-hand experienced ONLY ONE virus. ONE. In 25 years. The only thing I've ever seen a malware/virus scanner ever report as a problem is keygens and an IRC script, which were not really threats. That one virus did not come from a website, download, or anything like that. Some 'friend' sent me a file over an instant message program and that file was infected.

      Must be great not working in enterprise IT and not dealing with real-world attack surfaces that involves hundreds or thousands of computers and users.

    23. Re:Not enough by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2

      That used to be an argument, but in the last couple of years the major AV vendors have all shipped serious vulnerabilities. My favourite was in the Symantec product, which decided that the best place to put code that decoded images and scanned them was in the kernel. It would do this as soon as an image appeared in the filesystem, so if you went to a web page and your browser cached the image locally, or if you received an email with an image attachment and your mail client stored it to disk, the scanner would run. This sounds almost useful, and would have been if the thing dealing with the untrusted (and assumed to be at least potentially malicious) data had been in an unprivileged process with read-only access to the data and the ability to write a single bit of state outside. Unfortunately, it wasn't, and when someone found a vulnerability in the image decoder, it became possible to run arbitrary code in kernel space simply by persuading the user to store an image on their disk (which a lot of programs did automatically in response to network events).

      I think you're probably better off with the vulnerabilities that Windows ships with than those, minus a small chance that you'll be protected from exploits, plus the ones that these clowns introduce.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    24. Re:Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is why I am one of those exceptionally evil people who believe you should have a license, training and certification to be allowed near ANY computer device. We require it for amateur radio, driving a car, practicing medicine, law, etc. Should need a license to use a computer too, so you know what the fuck you're doing. It's at a point where irresponsible usage of a computer HARMS OTHERS.

      Having a driver's license doesn't stop people from being stupid drivers or having accidents. I can't see why it would be different for licensed computer users.

    25. Re: Not enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Godwin's law has nothing to do with mentioning Hitler being a faux pas. It's a statement of probability, nothing more

  3. Will it stop APK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Will Windows Defender protect me from APK and his spamming? Does it protect me from his hosts file manipulations?

    1. Re:Will it stop APK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you don't cleanse your hosts file with essential oils and tide pods then you need APK's optimizations.

    2. Re:Will it stop APK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear that hosts files inserted into the vagina are good for hole-istic cleansing.

    3. Re:Will it stop APK by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      I think there's a hosts entry that can do that for you.

  4. Ccleaner... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows 10 has removed it several times in the last year after updates. Embrace extinguish, entropy.

  5. Bundled Avast on my Win10? by Train0987 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Win10 that came on my HP laptop was bundled with Avast that throws the same scary "You may be infected! Upgrade Today!" messages. I jumped through hoops to remove it completely and then sometime last week it came back all on its own after a forced Windows Update.

    1. Re:Bundled Avast on my Win10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can thank HP for that, not Microsoft. Next time buy Asus or Acer (maybe even Fujitsu, Microsoft or even MSI), and remove all the useless "branding" software and tools.

    2. Re:Bundled Avast on my Win10? by ryanmc1 · · Score: 2

      I always wipe and reinstall with a clean version of Windows when I get a new computer. No exceptions. The drivers are easily found online and I make a backup disk or backup USB of the drivers incase something happens. This has made things much more enjoyable with the laptops I buy. With Windows 10 this is super easy because Microsoft provides a software package that will create an installer for you, and because Win10 registers itself online with your hardware specs you don't even need a key. It really is easy and I highly recommend it.

    3. Re:Bundled Avast on my Win10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah - that's what Microsoft are slowly realising. The Windows 10 Experience for the user is merely the the common denominator between Microsoft's code and whatever the OEM shovels on there. They're really wishing the OEM shovelware would go away. (Microsoft Surfaces are a lot nicer as they have no shovelware.)

      That's what Apple have always had - no OEM shovelware.

      This is where they're trying to get to with Win 10 S - a home user version of Windows that only executes store applications. Since they're all sandboxed, the attack surface should be much, much smaller and the scope for OEM shovelware should be vastly reduced (and a lot easier for the user to just right-click-uninstall; because Windows just nukes the app container rather than giving the app a chance to object.)

    4. Re:Bundled Avast on my Win10? by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 2

      It's still super-difficult to remove all of M$'s "AppX" crap. Even after running a 50-line Powershell script for both AppX and AppXPackages, my syspreped image updated itself and re-installed DuoLingo, Pandora, MSN News, etc. At least the Cortana removal seems to stick. I'm working on some GPO's to keep it all off, but its all TOTAL BULLSHIT.

      Why is God's name does my "Enterprise" OS come with Xbox shit that is "part of the OS" and unremovable? We are trying to make Win10E NIST 800-171 compliant, and I doubt there is any way in HELL to get it 800-53 compliant.

      There are rumors of a DoD-level "version" of Win10, that I assume M$ handed it's source code to the Feds and said "here, do with it what you need" to get it complaint. Of course, the rest of the population still has to deal with their advertising, "pushed apps", and more showing up.

    5. Re:Bundled Avast on my Win10? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Asus and Acer fix that problem by having the hardware crap out before the trial A/V subscription is over. Absolute garbage.

      For a laptop, I would buy a enterprise-level machine, such as a Dell Latitude or a Thinkpad. Though not HP, as their stuff is trash, even at the enterprise level.

  6. Who trusts windows defender? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously: Microsoft is the security problem, why would anyone trust them to actually fix the issues in Windows? They could have come out with Windows 7.2 if they wanted the best OS product for their customers, instead we have Windows 10, which is really Windows 8.01

    1. Re:Who trusts windows defender? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows defender is the only product that does what it purports to do, without halving the performance of your system.

      I have't run a full time AV on my system in at least half a decade, and never have i gotten viruses. I still leave an AV installed and do a manual scan periodically.

      People who get viruses on windows these days are just utter fools and would probably get themselves infected with something on Mac OS or Linux as well.

      And don't give me shit about extra "security" in MacOS/Linux stopping viruses, yeah it will stop it from hosing the whole system, but the user can still get just as much nasty crap running under their user account that will have no problem slurping up the info from the user's programs.

  7. Hi, I'm a linux and I'm a PC (running linux). by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One more reason to switch to linux. Sunday, is my linux server switch day! I am putting Xubuntu on my windows media server (for Plex, SickRage, CouchPotato and Kiwix). I'm so excited!

  8. I've got a bad feeling about this. by jrq · · Score: 1

    This will not end well.

    --
    My UID is prime!
  9. The left hand doesn't know what the right hand... by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    "And you should upgrade to Windows 11 right away to continue getting security updates after Windows 10 becomes unsupported!"

    Now this is a stress test of the new feature!

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  10. Microsoft doesn't like competition by Big+Bipper · · Score: 1

    They feel they should be the only ones spreading FUD ( fear uncertainty doubt ), to say nothing of the patent trolls they support.

    --
    You live and learn, or you don't learn much.
  11. Re:Trump / Russia Warning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have deposited 10 rubles and a gift card for a prostitute urination show into your account.

    Use them wisely, comrade.

  12. Had to block that part of defender anyway by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't stop bitching about uTorrent.

    1. Re:Had to block that part of defender anyway by Linsaran · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't stop bitching about uTorrent.

      uTorrent is pretty garbage these days anyways, ever since the original creator sold it. I switched to Deluge long ago

      --
      In a bit of shameless internet panhandling, I accept Litecoin Donations at Lbd2oH9QsthD1GfuUXPyka12YxvWJYnBVf
    2. Re:Had to block that part of defender anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you really wasting keystrokes discussing the post2.3.0 abomination that no one cares about?

      And using it as a data point about clients, even?

  13. Will it stop Microsoft Edge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With it's nagging to be the default browser and battery life lies. Plus Firefox with its Mr Robot extensions.

  14. Monopoly power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From March 1 Microsoft's Windows Defender and other security products will "classify programs that display coercive messages as unwanted software, which will be detected and removed," Shein said.

    "This website best viewed with IE"

  15. Someone call me an ambulance ... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

    "We find this practice problematic because it can pressure customers into making unnecessary purchase decisions,"

    The irony of this statement in this article combined with the article just above it about Office 2019 not running on anything but Windows 10 (thus forcing an OS upgrade if you upgrade Office) is killing me. How about this for a purchasing decision: I still have a CD with Office 97 on it; one of the last Offices to require activation and keys and phoning home to momma.

    However, after the last round of Norton putting up unclosable "Hey, how about installing me on all your other computers?" message windows, even after being told "NO never ask me again" and setting the "don't show promo messages" option in settings, I can see why something needs to be done. I had gotten used to the non-window messages about buying upgraded versions of AVG but Norton wins for obnoxious. AVG draws directly on the screen, creating something that LOOKS like a window, with an X to close it and a button to buy, but it's not actually a window. Whatever is behind the X and buttons are still active. You have to refresh the desktop to remove it. I can't imagine who approved such a marketing tactic.

    1. Re:Someone call me an ambulance ... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

      If it doesn't give you the option of closing the window can't you kill the process with the process manager or whatever Microsoft calls it (I've been away from Windows for a long time I've forgotten)? That's what I used to do when the situation came up but that was on XP so things have probably changed.

      As for Office, you don't have to upgrade right away. You only have to upgrade when the people you work with upgrade and can never remember to save in an earlier version because Microsoft tends to make a new format with each version that is incompatible with earlier ones even though only the UI really changes.

    2. Re:Someone call me an ambulance ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Products have an end of life. Are you disagreeing with this principal or just the time window they picked?

      If you are just disagreeing with the time window then what is your definition of a reasonable window for supporting Windows 7 and how did you justify your pick given that you quite obviously don't work for Microsoft.

      I'd bet additional money you don't work for any company producing an operating system.

    3. Re:Someone call me an ambulance ... by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      If it doesn't give you the option of closing the window can't you kill the process with the process manager or whatever Microsoft calls it

      Which process? Why should I have to do that in the first place? And when I tell it to never come back, it comes back.

      As for Office, you don't have to upgrade right away.

      And you don't have to buy the things that nagware nags you about. It seems that Microsoft is being hypocritical here, doesn't it?

  16. Oh, the irony! by jenningsthecat · · Score: 2

    With all the bullshit Microsoft pulled to both manipulate and coerce users into upgrading to their rented-spyware-posing-as-an-OS, this is really rich. OTOH I kinda get it, from the organized-crime / extortionist view that says "get offa my turf, punk!"

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    1. Re:Oh, the irony! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will it remove the annoying MS reminder boxes that pop up when watching a Netflix movie?
      Wait.. my virus scanner just asked...
      Win10 virus runniing.. do you want to sand-box now and install a real OS?
      Y/N ?

    2. Re:Oh, the irony! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Providing a free software upgrade vs scamming people out of money for absolutely nothing? Yeah totally comparable.

    3. Re:Oh, the irony! by jenningsthecat · · Score: 1

      Providing a free software upgrade vs scamming people out of money for absolutely nothing? Yeah totally comparable.

      Providing a forced and unwanted "free" software upgrade which is in many ways a downgrade, vs scamming people out of money for absolutely nothing? Yeah, you're right - they're not all that comparable. The scammers who only take your money are a finite drain on your resources, while the lingering pain, privacy invasion, and theft of your time represented by Windows 10 just goes on and on and on...

      --
      'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
    4. Re:Oh, the irony! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Providing a forced and unwanted

      Citation required. The vast majority of people don't give a shit what OS they have.

  17. So long Google! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No more trying to convince me to use your browser instead or to sign in to your services.
    Bye bye firefox! You don't really make the internet safer. I'll be glad to see this propaganda go.

  18. self censorship by rraylion · · Score: 2

    It would be great if it got rid of those annoying Microsoft ads that come up. Or if you are one of those unlucky people with home edition the mandatory upgrades that force your computer to close, even if you don't want to install it.

    But hey i'm acting like I own my computer, I forgot I am really leasing it from the OS.

    1. Re:self censorship by Required+Snark · · Score: 1

      You are a peasant, not a citizen. Peasants don't have ultimate control over the property they think they own.

      --
      Why is Snark Required?
  19. Re:The left hand doesn't know what the right hand. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no way that Windows will go all the way to 11. Linux on the other is making some huge strides toward 11. Just 7 more versions to go. So 20 years. Or just 1 year if we adopt Chrome's rapid update schedule.

  20. Pot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Meet Kettle

  21. Edge and Cortana by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Dear Microsoft,

    Really looking forward to this feature in Defender. I hate that coercive messaging stuff. I can't wait for it to remove Edge and Cortana from my system.

    Thanks

    1. Re:Edge and Cortana by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Hi, Windows has determined that the following program is performing malicious or coercive behaviours:

            AD-Block Plus

      We have disabled this program automatically and will prevent you from re-enabling it for your own safety, stupid stupid end user."

  22. Let me guess.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It makes users too cash-strapped to pay a monthly subscription fee for Office 365 when they get scammed into buying yet another security utility?

    Gosh! Microsoft really cares about us! I think my heart just grew two sizes.

  23. First Things First by eaglesrule · · Score: 1

    Nothing reflects MS's attitude of 'suck it bitch' more than the new style of dialog in Win10, too. A computer using 'we' words is meant to remind you who the tool is, not the machine doing whatever MS wants it to do.

  24. Oh really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The Redmond company is taking aim at all software that use scary messaging to convince people to upgrade to a paid product that purportedly fixes a problem detected by a free version. "

    Will it do the same with windows 10 upgrade program?

  25. Next Virus by BeemanIT · · Score: 1

    Windows Defender thinks Windows is the issue and uninstalls the OS.

  26. Office 2019 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is inline with what M$ is doing by only supporting Office 2019 on Windows 10, expecting as a result, to push companies to pay for Office 365.

    How do you remove that?

  27. So they're going to remove "Edge" browser? by brainchill · · Score: 1

    So they're going to remove "Edge" browser? This thing constantly tries to talk me out of using or installing other browsers....

  28. Brain's "HOWTO" user manual by DrYak · · Score: 1

    Are you also saying we as a society shouldn't try and shut down sketchy con-artist retailers because you're not stupid enough to fall for what they're selling and should be able to waste your money if you want to?

    Or maybe, we should reconsider the education system a bit :
    Maybe instead of blocking targets that are semi arbitrary labelled as "con artists" on the grounds of trying to shelter stupid people,
    we should instead educate stupid people and teach them how to use their brain and do their due information search to not fall for cons/snake oil/conspiracy theory/etc. ?

    Maybe if people just didn't forget how to use their brains, we'll have a lot less problems with people falling to stupid tricks.

    Just saying...

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Brain's "HOWTO" user manual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are mistaking that your level of concern is shared by the greater population. I suggest that the majority of the population don't care and, through using there computer more like an appliance, just want it to work when their trying to use it.

      You can try to educate as much as you like, but if they don't have any passion for it, it's just not going to happen.

    2. Re:Brain's "HOWTO" user manual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow my spelling/grammar choices were horrible. I guess I do need that second cup of coffee,

      "I suggest that the majority of the population doesn't care and, through using their computers more like an appliance, just want them to work.