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Spyware Becoming Worst Tech Support Problem 814

teknurd writes "Wired has an article about the growing problem of computer users having to call tech support to get help removing all of the spyware on their computers. 'The fast-growing phenomenon is already responsible for more than 12 percent of all technical support calls in Dell's consumer hardware division, the biggest category of complaints this year, company representatives said.' Personally, I have had to remove this plague from the computers of several friends and family members."
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Spyware Becoming Worst Tech Support Problem

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  • Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

    by baggachipz ( 686602 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:08AM (#9083601)
    http://www.spybot.info . That's all it takes. Have it run on people's windows startup and they're set.
    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:10AM (#9083629)
      http://www.spybot.info . That's all it takes.

      When you're Joe Blow at home, that's fine. But when you administer dozens, hundreds, thousands of Win boxes and you can't automate installing/configuring/running Spybot, things are a bit different.
      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

        by AndroidonPPC ( 737311 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:16AM (#9083722) Journal
        \\(machine name)\c$\documents and settings\all users\startmenu\programs\startup\ is good place to start

        or just make a registry file to add info into hkey_local_machine\software\microsoft\windows\curr ent version\run key. (hint: this works on any windoze box when done as administrator)

        with remote administration and a script, you could have those puppys running mighty quick.

        -Andy in Chi
        • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

          by mgpeter ( 132079 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:12AM (#9084528) Homepage
          just make a registry file to add info into hkey_local_machine\software\microsoft\windows\curr ent version\run key. (hint: this works on any windoze box when done as administrator)

          Instead of messing with the registry, download the Excellent Startup Control Panel from Mike Lin's Home Page [mlin.net]. This little Utility is an excellent way to control what does and does not execute on Windows startup. Using this utility you will be amazed at what processes are automatically started, some programs, like roxio's crap, will start 3-5 processes at Windows Startup.

          It is also an excellent way to very quickly see if any Adware/Spyware is installed without running Adaware or Spybot.

      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:3, Insightful)

        by dnoyeb ( 547705 )
        Are we computer specialist really any better than the Anti-Virus camp? We make money on both sides of this equation. Were becoming like lawyers.
        • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Allen Zadr ( 767458 ) * <Allen@Zadr.gmail@com> on Friday May 07, 2004 @11:27AM (#9085524) Journal
          I fully agree with you here. I make between $70 and $140 every time one of my co-workers' teenagers decides that their 'internet connection is not optimized'.

          I try to teach them how to take care of it themselves, and they have no interest in learning.
          Most lawyer tasks are the same, easy to do yourself, but there's a whole bunch of info to learn before you can get it right. I have no interest in learning law-craft.

      • by Saeed al-Sahaf ( 665390 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:44AM (#9084169) Homepage
        But when you administer dozens, hundreds, thousands of Win boxes and you can't automate installing/configuring/running Spybot

        Gee, that's strange. We have 300 Win boxes in my building and about 1000 company wide, not a lot really, but more than a few... Spybot runs just fine from the start-up script. Actually, though, since our machines (all of them) stay on 24/7, we run it and other stuff at night too (but those are scheduled tasks, of course). Need my LAN admin's number?

    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sulli ( 195030 ) * on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9083640) Journal
      Just run Mozilla, and none of that stoopid-ass ActiveX will try to hijack your PC.

      (Come on, didn't people see this coming when Microsoft came up with ActiveX back in the day?)

      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

        by chosen_my_foot ( 677867 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:20AM (#9083807)
        You forget that the user can still download and install WeatherBug, Precision Date Time Manager, and many other helpful products. Using an alternative browser does not prevent this action.

        For some reason a lot of people seem to believe that using Mozilla/Firefox/Opera makes their box invincible. It's a good start, but should only be one layer of your security.
        • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

          by zerocool^ ( 112121 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:45AM (#9085004) Homepage Journal

          I think it needs to be reiterated: It's a good start.

          It's a huge first step. I now run firefox, it's the default browser on my windows box. If you've read my comments in the past, I've always been a fan of I.E., and I still am, to be honest with you. I think I.E. is faster, and renders things better than Firefox, firefox (even though it's no where near moz's bloat) still uses more memory, plus there's this annoying javascript transparent thing that Firefox doesn't deal with well, and it just has several little annoying things I don't like.

          BUT.

          After casual surfing the web (with google toolbar installed to block popups) on I.E. a couple of months ago, I proceeded to get spyware left and right that I didn't even know about! The damn javascript buffer overflow that installs cool web search got me. I had no idea I got it until I ran adaware. Then I got some freaking spyware bug that deleted windows media player and replaced it with a spyware app or a virus or something.

          This is just from CASUAL web surfing. I didn't download anything, I didn't run anything, I never clicked "ok" on any of the "you are about to download and install 'CLICK HERE TO ACCEPT OUR AGREEMENT'" things. This was all exploits that hijacked my browser and installed spyware.

          Fuck. That.

          Firefox only has two advantages over IE+google toolbar: Tabbed Browsing (which i'm starting to like), and security. Until recently, they weren't reason enough to switch. Now, they are.

          So, it needs to be pointed out: Yes, there are still ways to get spyware even when running firefox. It's true. BUT, firefox is a HUGE first step. I don't have anything worse than a few tracking cookies now.

          AND it needs to be said: It does not mean you're a n00b l00ser if you run I.E. and you get spyware. It's nothing you did wrong. Even powerusers, whatever that means, still get spyware in I.E. You don't have to click to install anymore. It used to be enough to know that you shouldn't download and run stuff that you didn't know what it did. It's not anymore.

          ~Will
          • by Weaselmancer ( 533834 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @02:20PM (#9087890)

            I had no idea I got it until I ran adaware. Then I got some freaking spyware bug that deleted windows media player and replaced it with a spyware app or a virus or something.

            I just fought that one off last night. Took forever to nail it down. Here's what finally worked.

            Delete the wmplayer.exe in Program Files/Windows Media Player. Run ad-aware 6 with the latest definitions. That'll zap the crap that it installs, which for me was windows/a.exe and windows/system32/bridge.dll, along with a host of other reg keys and crap.

            Because it's windows, reboot and run the scanner again. If it finds anything, repeat.

            If you're lucky, you'll still have a working copy of wmplayer.exe in windows/system32/dllcache. You'll know it's the good copy if it's larger than around 6k or so.

            Hope this helps, because this one was a total pain in the ass to track down. Good thing my machine is dual boot Linux. And my main windows browser is now Firefox, too.

            Oh yeah, on a side note... Whoever wrote the scumware that overwrites Windows Media Player needs to be hung by a pair of thumb screws and roasted over a coal fire. It's one thing to sneak your apps onto a system, but another thing entirely to overwrite existing apps.

            Here's hoping their crap gets noticed on some FBI computer somewhere.

            Weaselmancer

            PS: Just in case there's a friendly FBI guy reading this, take the scumware wmplayer.exe into a Linux install and run "strings" on it. You'll see the URL of the fine folks who brought you this plague. They encrypt their strings by inserting 4 garbage characters over 0x80 every so often, so ignore those.

    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hattig ( 47930 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9083650) Journal
      That, and AdAware.

      So that they catch what the other one missed.

      If I was an OEM, I'd get a license from one of the companies to include AdAware/Spybot on the shipped systems and set it to run once a week. That's gotta be worth it to remove 12% of support calls!
    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:3, Interesting)

      by radixvir ( 659331 ) *

      I used to think that only computer novices got spyware. But just this past week i got several all at one time. i have no idea how it happened ( i dont even use internet explorer) but it was bad. after i run ad-aware and mcaffee to clean them off, one of them deleted some important files under my system folder, or at least thats what i assume because my tcp/ip wouldnt start. i ended up having to totally reinstall windows. ive since decided im going to try and use windows as little as possible, only when i ne

      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

        by petecarlson ( 457202 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:48AM (#9084211) Homepage Journal
        Unless you were using an older version of Ad-aware, LSP-FIX [cexx.org] would have fixed your tcp/ip stack. I used it on one of my friends computers and it worked perfectly. Of course I installed Mozilla while I was there and he asked me about it. I tried to explain that it was an opensource web browser but he just gave me a blank stare so I explained that it was an improved version of IE with a built in popup blocker and tabbed browsing.
      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:3, Interesting)

        by throwaway18 ( 521472 )
        >after i run ad-aware and mcaffee to clean them off, one of them
        >deleted some important files under my system folder, or at
        >least thats what i assume because my tcp/ip wouldnt start.

        There is at least one adware program that replaces one of the windows internet-related DLL's with it's own version. Adaware didn't handle removing it very well when I came across it months ago, I was hoping they had fixed that. It usually isn't necessasary to reinstall the machine. Removing TCP/IP from the list of inst
        • point of interest (Score:3, Informative)

          by RMH101 ( 636144 )
          you can't remove/readd TCP/IP in XP. you have to fix the stack. annoying, but there you go.
        • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:4, Informative)

          by scumdamn ( 82357 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:37AM (#9084927)
          The best fix for Winsock corruption in XP is to delete the Winsock and Winsock2 keys from the registry, reboot, and install TCP/IP over itself (you have to browse to c:\windows\inf to get it to show up in the list) but it works nearly every time. I've been having techs do it for about a month now and it's been very successful.
      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:3, Interesting)

        by gstoddart ( 321705 )
        I've come to the conclusion that between web vulnerabilities (like ActiveX controls) and the myriad of trivial pieces of software people install (funky cursors, search bars, whatever) a Windows machine is always going to be infected if you're not careful.

        My office machine I only use Mozilla except for sites that absolutely require IE, and I sure as hell don't click on or download anything that I don't explicitly want.

        My home XP box sits behind a hardware firewall, and except for *very* occasionally, I don
    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:19AM (#9083776) Homepage Journal
      Lavasoft Ad-Aware [element5.com] still detects things that spybot doesn't - and vice versa. Entirely (?) removing CoolWWWSearch actually required running both programs.

      There's nothing you can do to prevent spyware aside from completely locking down systems so users have nearly no permissions to the registry or anything else. This of course means that no programs not explicitly allowed on your network will operate. If you can deal with this tradeoff, more power to you.

      Spybot Search & Destroy is a fabulous piece of software but it doesn't do the whole job.

      • Entirely (?) removing CoolWWWSearch actually required running both programs.

        I believe some of the CWS spyware variants actually replace some of your executables (like Windows Media Player) with a trojan that downloads new versions of these wonderful pets. This is bad because no anti-spyware can help you when this kind of damage is done. You're gonna have to reinstall applications.

        I've always tried to explain to people that anti-spyware tools should be your last line of defense. You have to be aware of t

    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:28AM (#9083933)
      If you're an educated user, shoring up your home network is extremely simple:

      1) Install a hardware firewall.
      2) Install a software firewall.
      3) Install a quality antivirus program.
      4) Install Ad-Aware - preferably the Pro version with Ad-Watch.
      5) Install Spybot.

      The problem is that if you have family or friends that don't know anything about computers and don't seem to care to learn, doing the above will help you out temporarily... and then cause you a huge amount of problems on Windows.

      For example, every time the software firewall asks them to approve a connection, they'll either always deny them (screwing up their software) or approve them (screwing up their security). They'll be upset when they can't use a program because it needs ports opened on the firewall. If you show them how to open ports up, they'll eventually just open ALL ports, thinking "now I won't have to worry about doing it every time a new program wants new ports available". The other option is not to tell them how to do this and just do it for them. You are now their bitch.

      The other problem is that they'll want to install applications. In Windows, you can set several user levels. You can set a very restricted one that doesn't let users install software or access/modify any documents but their own. Then there's a level that will let them install software and use all documents. Then there's the full power user, backup user and admin user levels.

      For security purposes, you would of course want to set their account to a level that will not allow them to install software. Otherwise they're going to be installing every stupid spyware riddled, adware plagued, malicious, wasteful, resource-eating piece of shit they come across. So, now every time they want to install a program, they're going to come to you. You're their bitch.

      So the only way to achieve true security is to prevent them from doing anything they really want to do and now you're going to be bothered by every person that you've set up every time one of them wants to install a program or open up some ports. Every time they want to install a game, application, office software, utility, etc.

      It's a hassle just dealing with this for one person. Now imagine if your grandmother, an uncle, your mom, two siblings, a neighbor, a girlfriend and two family friends all have you on the hook like this? It never ends. And then people wonder why techies are becoming more and more reluctant to help and more abrasive. Look, it's like being a car mechanic. As a car mechanic, I would not expect my friends to repair their own engine block or diagnose and fix other complex problems - but I certainly expect them to fill their own gas tank, change their own oil, refill their wiper fluid, check and refill their power steering, check and fill their tires, replace signal lights, screw on their license plates, adjust their rear-view mirors and side mirrors and adjust their seats into position.

      However, for people who aren't willing (or maybe can't in the case of some elderly people who just can't fathom the concepts) to learn the basics, you'll find that if you don't help them they will end up with myriad of crap on their machines. Dozens of viruses, spyware, programs running in the background to steal resources and processing time, adware programs that pop-up crap all the time, hijacked browsers, three p2p networks starting at launch time and running in the background (eating up memory, cpu, storage, bandwidth), p2p utilities that go with them, "weatherbug" software, msn, yahoo, aim and others, and countless other things. I've seen people with so much fucking shit on their machines like the above mentioned that their machines would start-up and then die, crash or reboot before finishing displaying the desktop. Just too much crap running.

      It isn't my job to baby people, teach them every little thing and care for them. They can buy books, play around and learn on their own just like the rest of us had to. If you can't appr
      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Insightful)

        by edunbar93 ( 141167 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:22AM (#9084671)

        1) Install a hardware firewall.
        2) Install a software firewall.
        3) Install a quality antivirus program.
        4) Install Ad-Aware - preferably the Pro version with Ad-Watch.
        5) Install Spybot.


        Besides the 4+ hours of work that this entails, the specialized knowledge and cash required, a five item list like this is hardly what I would term "extremely easy."

        In fact, it's more like saying "Any educated person can boost the performance of his car in 5 easy steps! Just install a turbocharger..."

        And it's also worth noting that installing two firewalls like that is paranoid and stupid. Especially if the first one isn't even forwarding ports, something some 90% of computer users don't even need to do. And if you are forwarding ports, then what are you going to do on the client machine? Block those ports? What was the point of forwarding them again?
      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

        by Just Some Guy ( 3352 ) <kirk+slashdot@strauser.com> on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:35AM (#9084898) Homepage Journal
        The problem is that if you have family or friends that don't know anything about computers and don't seem to care to learn, doing the above will help you out temporarily... and then cause you a huge amount of problems on Windows.

        I have one (1) stock response to all non-business tech support requests. Say this verbatim, and without sounding condescending:

        I work on computers all day, but they're the
        big ones like banks use, and I don't know much about the smaller ones that people have at their desks.

        I know that Apple makes a nice little Macintosh computer that doesn't cost much more than a good one like the Windows kind you've been looking at, but they're a lot easier to use by people who aren't one of us computer geeks. My own wife has one and she loves it. If you get one of those, I could probably help you with it, but like I said, I really don't know much about Windows. Sorry I can't be of more help.

        It gives them a useful solution to the problem they're having, is honest (I really don't know a whole lot about Windows versions more recent than Win98), and has one of two outcomes:

        1. They buy a Mac, love it, and think I'm a hero.
        2. They stick with their PC, but finally believe me that "has a degree in computers" doesn't mean "can fix every computer made", and find someone else to pester.

        PS: You and I know that "big computer" means "FreeBSD web server over in the machine closet", but who wants to get hung up on details?

      • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:3, Insightful)

        by daviddennis ( 10926 )
        I really don't think people should have to treat their computers like a fortress by installing millions of lines of complex and potentially unreliable code on their computers, just to guard against outside attacks. It's like being forced to run an armor plated car, and accepting the huge performance and fuel economy hit.

        So I run Macs, which solves all those problems and more.

        Macs are a little more expensive, yes, but the amount of time and aggravation saved is worth every penny.

        I run all Macs at home an
    • Re:Just run Spybot (Score:5, Informative)

      by GPLDAN ( 732269 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:49AM (#9084239)
      I don't know if you've seen on the website, but Spybot has been under a concerted DDOS attack, off and on, for awhile. I think the fact the software is so damn effective, and the guy does just a frankly superb job of keeping signatures up, that's it's really put a thorn into the side of spybot creators everywhere.

      If you can afford it, consider donating to the guy. That's a helluva bit of software to be giving away. Either that, or nominate him for the Nobel Prize, if your on the committee that is.
    • by devphaeton ( 695736 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:57AM (#9084338)
      Or adaware or hijack this, yadda yadda...

      Problem is, we're talking about computers owned by the unwashed masses (at least in my tech support job). These are people that call up with a chip on their shoulder demanding that their ISP fix what has happened to their computer. Wonderful ads lik "Earthlink with a free Pop-Up blocker" etc. have now in the perception shifted the responsibility of parasite problems onto the ISP.

      A lot of these people don't understand the basic directory structure or how to find something that's been downloaded onto their computer, and walking them through a download of a parasite removal tool, updating it, running it, and then guiding them through what to do with what it has found can EASILY turn into a 2-hour procedure. Most of us have more important shit to do than that. Double that amount of time if they don't have two phone lines and/or cannot be connected to the internet. Any coincidental problems are blamed on your removal tool.

      Also, the latest trend i'm seeing, is people calling up to complain about all these popup ads and homepage hijackings/search pages thrown in. You start pointing to all the free games they've downloaded, bonzai buddy, Desktop Calendar, Weatherbug, etc, and you are met with "but i LIKE having my weather updates, i LIKE having my Calendar there" etc.

      THEY WILL REFUSE TO LET YOU HELP THEM

      Doesn't stop them from still calling you up "i'm still having a problem with all these popups..."

      Most machines i've cleaned up (like HUNDREDS of parasites), i'll hand it back to them and tell them what not to do again, and they are in the exact same state in a week's time. They simply go and install all the same crap they had before.

      I was warned by many that doing Tech Support for a living was a burnout job, and borderline emotional abuse. But the last couple years of parasites have made it pure insanity. Tech Support is at a whole new low...

      "i need to find a new job" is an understatement.

      • On top of that (Score:3, Interesting)

        by andih8u ( 639841 )
        Most companies that provide tech support will not let you remove / delete anything from a user's computer...liability issues if removing spyware ends up borking the whole thing. Then it was tech support that killed the computer and the company is responsible for fixing it.
  • ad-aware (Score:4, Informative)

    by frizz ( 91565 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:08AM (#9083602)
    Is there anything better than ad-aware for solving this problem?
    • Re:ad-aware (Score:5, Informative)

      by I confirm I'm not a ( 720413 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:18AM (#9083755) Journal

      Is there anything better than ad-aware for solving this problem?

      Why, yes [safer-networking.org], as it happens! ;)

      I've read some suggestions to run both Adaware and Spybot - I've found either to be more than capable on their own, but then I tend to practice "safe-browsing": use Firefox, use Linux where possible, etc.

  • my experience... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ummagumma ( 137757 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:10AM (#9083621) Journal
    Im the IT manager for a 100+ person software compandy (actually, the ONLY IT person...)

    Over the last 6 months, I've had to spend more and more time cleaning this crap off peoples machines. I've got it down to a science, though - I keep a disk around with a whole lot of useful tools on it such as:

    Spybot search and destroy
    stinger
    all windows XP / 2000 patches since the latest SP
    spywareblaster
    and others

    Takes me about 15 minutes to clean a machine now. Of course, that is 15 minutes that I could be doing something USEFUL...
    • by GypC ( 7592 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:16AM (#9083730) Homepage Journal
      Oh yeah... and why do your users have the security privileges to install software?
    • Re:my experience... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:18AM (#9083765) Homepage Journal

      I'm [network/unix/Mac/Novell/some windows] support for a ~200 user research place. Every Friday our Director of Research sends out a "what's up" email talking about various projects, etc. A couple of years ago I was asked to do a weekly thing called "Computer Corner". What I do is have a paragraph with a link to an internal webserver I run with more info.

      I did a spyware article a while back and on the server had some tools for installation complete with how-to's, screenshots, etc. Naturally some people aren't geeks and are a bit leery of anything remotely technical so we always offer to come do the work if needed. That happened only a handful of times.

      If you have a lot of users that approach may be helpful.
    • Re:my experience... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jamonterrell ( 517500 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:21AM (#9083825)
      That's interesting. I usually stick with ad-aware, but decided to evaluate some other products for use at work. Within 2 minutes of installation (The first time I ran IE afterwards), I had a popup from gator come straight up. I'm not saying without a doubt that spywareblaster contains gator from the original source, but the copy I got my hands on snuck gator in. Anyone else seen this? Did you download your copy direct or from a download mirror? (Also interesting to note is that spywareblaster, as of the last version I saw, did not detect gator as spyware.)
    • by SilentChris ( 452960 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:23AM (#9083838) Homepage
      Permissions are your friend. We have a similar situation but we knew long ago that limited permissions was best for most users. They can download all the crap they want -- they just can't install it. Same goes for viruses. We haven't had a single virus or spyware problem since we instituted the policy.
  • Good tools. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by grub ( 11606 ) <slashdot@grub.net> on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:10AM (#9083624) Homepage Journal

    Spybot Search & Destroy [safer-networking.org] [Best spyware cleaner IMHO, also immunizes against re-installation]
    Javacool's Spyware Blaster [javacoolsoftware.com] [works well in conjunction with Spybot]

    I used to use Lavasoft's AdAware [lavasoftusa.com] but after it wasn't updated for a while someone recommended Spybot which I've stuck with.
    • Re:Good tools. (Score:3, Informative)

      by WebGangsta ( 717475 )
      I used to use Lavasoft's AdAware but after it wasn't updated for a while someone recommended Spybot which I've stuck with.

      Ad Aware was updated a few weeks ago to version 6.181 (?) and does a better job of getting rid of stuff (including CWS) than the current version of Spybot. Normally, I would run Ad Aware then Spybot to finish cleaning stuff that Ad Aware left behind, but now I've found that I have to run Spybot first followed by Ad Aware. This may be temporary, but still...

      I think it has to do wit

  • i heard that... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by psychalgia ( 457201 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:10AM (#9083627) Homepage
    with the company i work for id love to make suggestions to help people rid themselves of this, but were not allowed because its all third party stuff. i dont work for an ISP, but an internet banking group, and time after time people are blaming their bank for redirect hijackers and popups...all i can say is that your computer is messed up and you should try to call your ISP for assistance. not like theyd be in a much better sitch than me. too bad we can convince people to stop clicking on every bloody thing that pops onto their screen.
  • Removal Tools (Score:3, Interesting)

    by tsheriffk ( 750882 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9083636)
    between spy-bot and hijack this, i have been able to remove any spyware i have encountered. The trick with spybot, is that people need to know what they are doing, so they dont screw up their computer. Adaware is dummy proof, but only does gets a portion of the stuff.
  • by theirishman ( 749404 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9083637) Journal
    Personaly I find foramt C: the best for getting rid of crap like that!
  • Bonzi Buddy (Score:5, Funny)

    by AtariAmarok ( 451306 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:11AM (#9083649)
    I always ask Bonzi Buddy to help solve my spyware problems. He is always so helpful!
  • What a Crock (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Doesn't_Comment_Code ( 692510 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:12AM (#9083654)
    If I remember correctly from a previous article (3-6 months ago), Dell prohibits its tech support from helping customers remove certain programs that could be considered spyware. They are unable to do so because Dell, and some other suppliers have partnerships with the makers of the borderline spyware.

    What a crock!
    • Re:What a Crock (Score:5, Informative)

      by Doesn't_Comment_Code ( 692510 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:24AM (#9083852)
    • Re:What a Crock (Score:4, Interesting)

      by DR SoB ( 749180 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:31AM (#9083974) Journal
      Adaware is great, except i've found they've missed many brutal spyware programs before, especially programs that deeply imbed themselves in other programs (such as Windows Media Player, very common). SpyBot seems to miss a few as well, although normally not as many as Adaware. After running Adaware and Spybot on a few heavily effected computers, I think installed the new Norton Antivirus 2004 + Internet Security, and it found 9-15 OTHER missed spyware programs.. Of course, to fix them all I would have to boot on the disk and run it seperately..blah!

      I've found installing NetScape also helps greatly, as it blocks many malicious pop-up ads. Normally when I'm asked to configure a computer for someone, the last step is to delete shortcuts to IE and install Netscape as the default, people are wierded out at first (I've never seen this browser before! "It's great!"), but after a while they swear by it too.

      My brother recently brought a computer I gave him just maybe 5 months ago, home from University for me to inspect, because of "poor performance' (P4 @ 2.6 w/ 1 gig ram, GeForce 4, poor performance? What the hell is he running), well I booted it and opened the task manager, running at 100% NON-STOP, Memory almost maxed, and at least 30 Un-identified programs running. Forget spybot or anything, it's FDISK time! But it gave me some insight into the average user, because he told me he noticed it was running slow, so he uninstalled as many valid programs as possible (of course to no effect), the average user has NO IDEA what's wrong, they just know the thing runs slower then the old Apple II's!
  • by mausmalone ( 594185 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:12AM (#9083658) Homepage Journal
    AdAware is a great program, I swear by it. Also, working at a help desk, I often tell people to go into IE advanced settings and disable 3rd party browser extensions. They seem to think that if it's a toolbar for IE, it's automatically a great idea to download it.
  • by Goodl ( 518602 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:12AM (#9083667)
    get on it Symantec etc. this getting to be as big if not a bigger problem than viruses. All the computers of family and friends are rife with this stuff, and they won't stump for Ad-aware pro as well as AV sw
    • by abrinton ( 590891 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:49AM (#9084237)
      Funny, it is integrated into McAfee. I use it in my 100 person company and it works pretty well. The feature is called "Find Unwanted Programs" or something. It's all set up with EPO so I know every desktop has it, and nobody can turn it off. Catches most spyware, and McAfee is good about updating.

      There is one major drawback. McAfee decides what is an "unwanted program" and you can't change it. It stops some tools that I would rather it didn't. However, I've found this trade off to be well worth it as I spend exactly *nill* time cleaning spyware.

      I get calls all the time about the "virus" someone or other just got though.
    • by blunte ( 183182 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:50AM (#9085090)
      I spent an hour with our Symantec account rep last year imploring him to communicate how badly we need spyware protection integrated with virus protection.

      In the US corporate world, Symantec is probably the leader. If they would just buy Spybot or something, build in a spyware signature download system (as they have with virus), my job would be so much easier. I'd even happily pay them another 5k$ for that feature on our machine.

      But this sales guy didn't even know what spyware was.

      Symantec really missed out on a big feature that would have set them apart from McAfee.
  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:13AM (#9083677)


    ...priceless.

    • Maybe (Score:3, Insightful)

      by llywrch ( 9023 )
      My primary workstation at home runs Linux. However, to keep peace in the familiy, I got my wife a laptop running Windows (98SE to be precise; don't laugh, it does everything she needs, & I installed Eudora so to avoid Outlook & all of its problems, a step that prevented her from virus infections countless times).

      So last week while playing one of the online games at Yahoo, she is bombarded by countless pop-up ads. While she is a competent user, she knows this is beyond her & asked for my help. S
  • People (Score:5, Funny)

    by Schezar ( 249629 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:16AM (#9083718) Homepage Journal
    Every time I remove this crud, I explain exactly why they had it to begin with. I tell them Comet Cursor , Gator, Bonzai Buddy, and the like are VIRUSES. Absolute VIRUSES. I tell them not to download them, and the problems will never come back. I set their IE security settings to not allow Active X as well.

    Within days, they're all back. "But I LIKE my Comet Cursor! I didn't think it would happen this time."

    The problem here is that many people today lack basic problem solving skills. They see a problem with their VCR, they fix it. (Clock's off, let's say). They see a similar problem with their computer, and they freeze up and assume they can't fix it even though, in the case of the clock for example, it's the SAME PROBLEM with nearly the SAME SOLUTION.

    People don't seem to apply their own basic intelligence to computers. Nor do they seem to learn from their mistakes. "Why did you install Spambar again?"

    "I wanted the -feature-. How was I supposed to know it was bad?"

    "Because it caused this SAME PROBLEM THE LAST THREE TIMES YOU INSTALLED IT! I HATE YOU! DIEDIEDIE!" /works for tech support
    • Re:People (Score:5, Funny)

      by eth1 ( 94901 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:40AM (#9084110)
      "People don't seem to apply their own basic intelligence to computers"

      That's because computers all have a Common Sense Exclusion Field generator. Anyone coming into that field turns into a dribbling idiot. However technical type people's brainwave patterns generat electromagnetic field around them that nullifies this field. It also knocks quirky hardware and software back into order, which is why it mysteriously starts working once you show up to fix the problem.
  • Switch? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thesolo ( 131008 ) * <slap@fighttheriaa.org> on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:17AM (#9083750) Homepage
    Personally, I have had to remove this plague from the computers of several friends and family members.

    Not to sound snide, but this is exactly why all my family & close friends run Macs now. It's easier on them, and it's a hell of a lot easier on me, since now I don't have to stop over, run Adaware, and clean their systems for them.
  • Joe Sixpack and TCO (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mrneutron ( 61365 ) * on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:18AM (#9083768)
    Last night I spent 3 hours at a neighbor's house on spyware patrol. He's a fireman who plows my driveway for free (he is Joe Sixpack personified), and I'm his volunteer tech monkey. I cleaned them all out 2 months ago, and now they were in worse shape.

    All 3 of computers were unable to surf the web. Teenage daughters had downloaded Kazaa, weatherbug, morpheus and others. I explained the dangers of spyware (and getting sued by the RIAA, hoping the scare them into ending the spyware party) to them last time, with predictable results. I also advised Dad to lay down the law (I'm not holding my breath).

    The 98SE box (yeah, I know) was completely hosed. Booted up, auto-launched about 8 different programs, auto popups, and would actually blue screen before I could launch a single app. I blew that one away, reinstalled from scratch, and ran Windows update (requiring 5 reboots) for close to 2 hours (ever run windows update after a clean install of 4-year old media? Not fun).

    And he has a hardware firewall and fast cable modem connection: this would have been impossible on dialup (and the clean install would have been compromised within 10 minutes without the firewall).

    After all of this, I had all 3 computers working fine, with up-to-date patches, virus protection, and an Ad Aware icon on the desktop. Also a lecture on the evils of spyware to the assembled daughters.

    I'll be back there in a month or 2, guaranteed. Let's hope for lots of snow next winter.
    • by hattig ( 47930 )
      It seems that people install these things again and again because there is a slight feature in it that they like.

      So maybe a good solution is to find something legitimate that does that same task and install it for them.

      For example, there must be a legitimate application out there that does what Comet Cursor does without the spyware. Install Bittorrent and add shortcuts to various bittorrent sites - if they are going to download music, at least make it download music safely and usefully for other users. An
    • Disk Images Rock! (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Mockura ( 524860 )
      If you have disk imaging software (Drive Image, etc.), after updating everything make an image and burn to CD. The next time you have to redo his system (and it sounds innevitable) just blast back to the base image.
  • by manavendra ( 688020 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:20AM (#9083787) Homepage Journal
    Spybot removal software is one thing, but is there a real solution to this problem?

    User's will continue installing software they think is cool, or hear about from their friends/colleagues - be it bonzi buddy, kazaa or anything else. Pretty soon they'll start facing problems - the computer would begin to be unresponsive since kazaa is eating all the cpu, searches in google fail because IE is redirected to SearchScout, or whatever else you have/

    Cure is one thing, what's the prevention for all this? And I ask this, not for informed, knowledgeable users, but naive home users who don't know any better?

    No M$ bashing please. I have heard of several tools that keep track of what's installed and the changes to registry, but haven't come across anything will a simple interface and a "knowledge" of most common spyware (possibly updated frequently from a public server). Such a tool would at least make the customer support job easier!
    • by david.given ( 6740 ) <dg@cowlark.com> on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:00AM (#9084380) Homepage Journal
      Cure is one thing, what's the prevention for all this? And I ask this, not for informed, knowledgeable users, but naive home users who don't know any better?

      There isn't one. I'm afraid it's that simple.

      The real villain is the computing model used. Windows (and Unix, and OS X) has a pretty simple security model: programs are either trusted, where they can run and use local resources, or they're not, in which case they can't.

      This means that in order for the user to execute ThisMayBeAGame that it's downloaded from some random web site, the user has to tell the OS to trust ThisMayBeAGame. At which point the user is screwed, because it's got no way of determining what ThisMayBeAGame is actually doing.

      ...and before you jump on me: yes, I know that all the operating systems I'm talking about support fine-grained access control. Unfortunately, it's only in some areas. Linux only supports it in the filesystem. You can restrict a process to be able to touch some files only, but you can't restrict it to being able to open sockets to certain addresses only or to use no more than X mips of CPU time. Window is even worse because most people (myself included) disable file system access control entirely because it's just too inconvenient; the default user can do anything. I don't know about OS X but since it's based on BSD I assume it's like Linux.

      ...and yes, I know that you can get high-security patches for some operating systems that do provide this sort of control, but they're not used.

      What's needed is a radically different computing model. Instead of a brittle system where all running software is trusted and you have prophylactic systems in place to distinguish between trusted software and untrusted software, you need a failsafe system where it simply doesn't matter if you run malicious code because it can't do any harm.

      Managed systems like .NET and Java are a step in the right direction but things need to go much further. Imagine a computing system where your desktop computer simply provides computing resources to a whole ecosystem of interacting software agents. Some of these you put there; some of them arrived as part of other people's documents; some just wandered in off the local network. Some of them may be helpful, some may be malicious. They're all managed by a high-level system that doles out system resources depending on what the user's doing. An agent that's attached to the screen gets more CPU time and real memory than one that's not. An agent that's resident on the machine's local storage gets storage space, an agent that's arrived from the network doesn't. A transient agent can only make network connections to a host if it can present proof that it actually has something to do with that host... and so on.

      Such a system would be far more resilient than the current ones. It would also work rather differently, but that's no bad thing. A lot of security issues would simply go away. Of course, there would be other problems that you wouldn't get with one of today's system --- notably, your software ecosystem would waste lots of resources --- but I think that's eminently affordable.

      Now, I suppose, all I have to do is to go away and write it...

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:20AM (#9083797)
    Dell should just provide users with a Windows Live CD that contains and anti-virus program and a spyware removal program.
    Pop it in, computer boots up, runs the anti-virus and spyware removal, shuts down.

    Then there is no hassle for the customer about them going to an internet site and installing a program, and then figuring out how to run it.
  • by SirChive ( 229195 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:20AM (#9083810)
    In the last couple of months I've seen four or five computers that were rendered completely useless by spyware. The owners literally could not open their browser and get on the web.

    Many of the newer programs should not really be called "spyware". They are really a form of hijack-ware. They seize control of a users browser and send up an endless stream of ads.

    And no, the average user will never be able to cope with this. Most people just want to buy a computer and use it. They are no more interested in learning how to maintain a computer than they are in learning auto maintenance. It's up to the computer industry to deliver usable products to the end user.
    • > They are no more interested in learning how to maintain a computer than they are in learning auto maintenance.

      Most drivers also have driver training, a driver's license, insurance, and know at least that the car needs gas and occasional maintenance
  • Don't run anything (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nuggz ( 69912 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:21AM (#9083812) Homepage
    I don't understand the problem.

    My wife is relatively computer literate. But it comes down to a simple rule.

    Don't download anything, don't install anything. Ignore all those taskbars and toolbars and toys.

    we've had no trouble.
  • by jonasmit ( 560153 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:25AM (#9083877)
    Finally, Friedberg [from Microsoft] cautions Internet users to pay extra attention to offers of free software. "Be suspicious," he said. "When something's free, there's likely a catch."

    I worry that ordinary users will associate the free software work done in the Linux/BSD community with spyware - or more likely that MS will turn up the rhetoric against the Linux/BSD community when the competition gets hot in the desktop space.

  • by Serapth ( 643581 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:27AM (#9083914)
    There is one thing I cant figure out here. Spyware is the next big thing after virii... why havent the big anti virus companies gotten in on the action? I mean, how much more work would it take a McAffe or Symantec to add spyware detection tools and removal software to their current products? If you think about it, the only big thing that distinguishes one AV company from another is there response times to a new virus. Wouldnt this be a very sellable feature?

    On the bright side, the big kids staying out of it, allows little guys the like LavaSoft ( ad-aware ), to carve a niche for themselves. However, in a lavasoft type company gets smart and offers virus removal in their tool aswell... why would you not get the do it all tool, instead of two pieces of software?

    Its always funny watching big commerical companies miss the boat on stuff like this though :)

    Also, I may be wrong, their may be an AntiVirus product out there that deals with SpyWare. If there is, please let me know!
  • by dioscaido ( 541037 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:28AM (#9083924)
    I'd say 75% of spyware issues come from users running as part of the Administrator group. All day-to-day use windows accounts should be a regular user, with the least priviledges as possible. Without being part of the Admin group, the spyware would not be able to write to HKLM registry, C:\ or C:\WINDOWS. Some spyware could still infect the user's directory, but at least a simple re-log on to Administrator could be done to clean up the machine.
    • While that is a good suggestion, it's also very annoying. If I run as a regular user and want to install something, I have to actually log out, log back in as Administrator, install the software, log out, and then log back in under the normal account.

      Why can't Windows just prompt for the Administator password when I want to install something? Not offering that practically ensures that almost nobody will use the normal user settings. It simply makes it too difficult to install software.

      Talk about stupidity
      • Are you on Win2K? (Score:5, Informative)

        by not_a_product_id ( 604278 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @10:21AM (#9084641) Journal
        If you are you can run most things as Administrator WITHOUT having log out. Just hold down shift and right-click on the EXE. The pop-up menu will have a "Run-As" option. Just put in your administrator details and away you go. It's not perfect but it's a damn sight easier than having to log out.
  • by SilentChris ( 452960 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:31AM (#9083973) Homepage
    Permissions are you friend. We had a spyware/virus situation in our office until we instituted a new policy: no one has install permissions. You want to install stuff, come to us. You can download all the crap you want, you just can't install it. Complaints will get filed in the circular bin.

    We coupled XP permissions, SUS (godsend, that thing) and NAV Corporate. NAV updates everyone's definitions as soon as they come out. SUS sends out updates nightly (usually a few days pass after they're issued by MS so we can test and approve them). Firewall keeps dump RPC requests out.

    Since then: no viruses, no spyware. Time taken to set up all of the pieces: a few days. Money spent: XP licenses came with new machines, NAV cost a couple grand, SUS was free. Time and frustration saved: priceless.

  • by StandardCell ( 589682 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:37AM (#9084066)
    The default settings in Internet Explorer are one of the biggest causes of spyware insertion. The problem is that spyware on a page causes IE to come up with a message window that says "Would you like to install FREE toolbar from foo.bar?" and then at the bottom it says something about a security certificate.

    Well, as you all know, anyone can go to Verisign and buy a certificate for authentication purposes, but most people take certificates to mean that it's certified safe software. For the uninformed user, there's little difference between this and the latest Macromedia Flash plug-in.

    Even worse, there are a lot of sites that cause Internet Explorer to go into a loop with the plug-in. By that I mean:

    1. Plugin for "FREE SphyWhere Inc. ToolBar Search!" presents itself to user.
    2. User presses "No" button or the close window button to avoid installation.
    3. IE comes back with a dialog that says "You MUST install free toolbar to gain access!" and then has to click the "Ok" button or the close window button on THAT dialog.
    4. Process repeats itself at Step 1 and continues in perpetuity unless the user is fast enough to be able to close the actual browser window before the plugin pops up, or until the user consents, or unless the user shuts down Internet Explorer.

    This occurs primarily on porn sites, but it will occur many times on legitimate sites (e.g. VG-Network, formerly Dave's Video Game Classics for classic games [vg-network.com] and one of the music lyric sites (can't remember which off the top of my head).

    The root of the problem here is that - surprise - Microsoft has continued to let websites exploit this peculiarity in its browser. The end result is that users get frustrated and either inadvertently or out of frustration simply allow the spyware to be installed. Even worse, if the user is dumb enough to have "Low" set on their security settings due to their own inability or unwillingness to learn about basic browser functionality, all this spyware will get installed automatically. Some users I believe continually complain about their computer being slow to the point where they're prompted to upgrade unnecessarily because of spyware they don't know that they have.

    So...on every fresh Windows install I do, I do it behind a NAT router to begin with, install all service packs and security updates and drivers, then put a software firewall on the computer, then an antivirus app with Trojan detection, and finally a spyware removal app. Then I instruct people to go to Windows Update every day, their virus update every day, and Spyware check every week.

    Isn't spyware fun?
  • Nip it in the bud (Score:4, Insightful)

    by WebGangsta ( 717475 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:38AM (#9084074)
    As others have said, the biggest issue that we have to deal with isn't the spyware itself, but the end-users who "just have to have" whatever the associated programs are. And these programs don't just slow their computers down, it also affects the network by adding unnecessary traffic to the pipe.

    What are the worst offenders? Those programs offering either "cute" or "informative". Desktop wallpaper, custom cursors, so many toolbars and geegaws to make your browser look like CNN's Headline News. A time updater. A date updater. A weather notifier. Hate to tell you, but I have a watch, a calendar, a radio, and a window. Between these four things, I think I'll know what the day/time is and what weather is coming.

    What would these same users do if they drove up to a street corner and there was somebody waiting to plaster their car with a flashy bumper sticker in exchange for their friends' email addresses? I would hope that these folks would just drive away. So why does it work on a computer screen?

    Hell, half the problems business have could be solved if companies just banned access to all the websites that produce these programs. Can't download Weatherbug or Webshots if you can't get to the websites in the first place. No need to visit each individual computer if you can use the firewall to do your job for you. Anyone have a list of those evil IP addresses they'd like to share? (and by "evil" I mean, well, "evil")

  • by zeno_lee ( 125322 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:52AM (#9084276)
    In addition to using the various anti-spyware software recommended above, like AdAware and SpyBot, I've made it a regular habit to look at these registry keys:

    Run regedit:
    Start->Run-> "regedit"

    Look in:
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
    SOFTWARE
    Microsoft
    Windows
    CurrentVersion
    Run
    RunOnce
    RunOnceEx

    The Run is an especially attractive haven for spyware companies. That's how spyware programs run their programs after users reboot their computers. If you suspect there are weird entries in these registry keys, download spyware removal software and run it. If you don't know what you're doing don't mess with the keys.

    I also check TaskManager regularly for weird processes. It's a bit technical, but after a while you can see which processes belong and which ones don't.

    • Also look under the HKEY_CURRENT_USER branch, under the same registry keys. Some programs will hide some startups in there, knowing most people who know about HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE still don't know to look in HKEY_CURRENT_USER. Also take a look at your BHOs (Browser Helper Objects). This program should help you sort them out without having to dissect your registry: BHODemon [definitivesolutions.com]
  • Old Hat (Score:3, Insightful)

    by doodleboy ( 263186 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:52AM (#9084279)
    Like a lot of the /. crowd, I do tech support for an extended group of family and friends. Most of these folks have no idea that leaving an unfirewalled unpatched win98 machine sitting on a broadband connection is a bad thing. All they know is it doesn't work anymore and can I fix it?

    If they're on a broadband connection I get them a hardware firewall. I don't even ask, I just buy it and hand them the bill. I also enable automatic updates. I generally use free tools like ad-aware and spybot, tiny firewall, a free av scanner if they're too cheap, etc.

    In what has to be the most painful bit for them, I give the Inevitable Security Lecture. Their attention span being what it is, I only hit the high points. I point to the Windows Update icon, explain what critical updates are, explain what spyware is (and how to use ad-aware & spybot), etc. It's probably a waste of time, but you never know.

    There you have it. I've been through it over and over. Like I said, old hat.
  • If a bunch of spyware sites are set to a certain # of hosts, can we just make them resolve to 127.0.0.1 with a nice custom hosts file?

    I know mike's ad blocking hosts file does it for pop-ups, but what about stuff like bonzi buddy?

    If so I'd like to put it on my dad's computer. Problem is, a lot of little rinky-dink apps he downloads have spyware just piggybacking on it. Then again there's a few utilities that take care of that.

    Ahh i can see in a few years we'll have a nice internet that will blindfold themselves to such malicious sites.
  • [X] marks the spot (Score:4, Informative)

    by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @09:56AM (#9084323) Homepage
    This is what I told my dad after removing another 20 porn auto-dialers from his system ("Yeah sure dad, you have no idea how those got there"); Whenever you encounter a popup which you don't fully understand, click the [X] button top-right, do not click the "Yes", "No", "Cancel" or any other buttons. If no [X] button exists, hit the Alt+F4 keys. This basically got rid of practically everything problems since he doesn't install software himself (wouldn't know how if he wanted to).
  • I saw in a couple of comments that folks referred users off to their ISP for help removing these items.
    DON'T! Please!
    A comparison I had to use yesterday with a customer because they were getting angry that we(ISP) would not help them was:
    If you have a car, don't maintain it, ignore the recall notices, drive without your seatbelt and slam it into park while still moving, you're going to have an accident or break the damn thing.
    Do not call the DOT/highway department because of it. We can't and are not going to help you.

    An ISP's job it to provided a customer an internet connection. Not to be their free tech bitches for any and every issue that comes along. We view virii and spyware as OS issues and not the ISP's connectivity issue.
    Our qualifying test is.....if your computer was in perfect working order, can you get on the internet. If it's not.....call us back when it is and we'll help you with the internet.
    That may sound a little customer unfriendly but when queue hold times are over 30 minutes and every customer is pissed off, you have to draw the line somewhere.

    If we fail to hold computer users responsible for their own actions, we are enablers of the behaviors we are complaining about.

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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