On Wed 2006-08-30 16:11:42, Crispin Cowan wrote:
> Pavel Machek wrote:
> >> The Windows problem is foolish users who download something shiny, such
> >> as enhanced emoticons or a keen password caching mechanism (e.g. Gator)
> >> or games (as in David's example) which turns out to be spyware. Under
> >> David's demo, you can download and run the spyware, but it doesn't get
> >> access to the critical system files that make spyware so difficult to
> >> remove.
> >>
> > Well, it gets access to my browser, which contains most of the stuff
> > spyware is interested in, anyway.
> >
> It gets access to the data, but doesn't get to insert itself into
> important system files. An important attribute of spyware is that it is
> hard to remove, and this makes the "hard to remove" property much harder
> to achieve.
As I wrote in my previous email, yes, it makes it easier to remove.
Thinking about it, it may also make it hard to survive login/logout;
which is actually good point.
Pavel
--
(english) http://www.livejournal.com/~pavelmachek
(cesky, pictures) http://atrey.karlin.mff.cuni.cz/~pavel/picture/horses/blog.html
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