ADAWARE 2007

  • Thread starter Thread starter sasha gottfried
  • Start date Start date
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sasha gottfried

I just ran a few scans with the new ADAWARE. The old version SE 1.06 used to
come up with at least 20 cookies which were listed as "critical objects."
This new one hasn't found a single critical object yet! I can't figure
this.........can anyone?

Thanks,


Marc
 
sasha gottfried aka (e-mail address removed),after much thought,came up with
this jewel:
I just ran a few scans with the new ADAWARE. The old version SE 1.06
used to come up with at least 20 cookies which were listed as
"critical objects." This new one hasn't found a single critical
object yet! I can't figure this.........can anyone?

Thanks,


Marc

perhaps your surfing habits are improving....then again....

max
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sasha gottfried said:
I just ran a few scans with the new ADAWARE. The old version SE 1.06 used
to come up with at least 20 cookies which were listed as "critical
objects." This new one hasn't found a single critical object yet! I can't
figure this.........can anyone?

The machine and you cannot be attacked by cookies anyway. Maybe, they
decided that these cookies that were deemed *critical* are not *critical*
anymore.
 
sasha gottfried said:
I just ran a few scans with the new ADAWARE. The old version SE 1.06 used
to come up with at least 20 cookies which were listed as "critical
objects." This new one hasn't found a single critical object yet! I can't
figure this.........can anyone?

Thanks,


Marc

ive often thought some of those programs include some 'threats' to get the
hit count up, even if the 'threat' was actually extremely low. that way you
feel like its doing something.

randy
 
It's just strange that the previous version (which I reinstalled) still
comes up with 20-30 "critical objects" while the 2007 version comes up with
none!
 
From: "Mr. Arnold" <MR. (e-mail address removed)>


| The machine and you cannot be attacked by cookies anyway. Maybe, they
| decided that these cookies that were deemed *critical* are not *critical*
| anymore.

I'll agree with this assertion.
 
xrongor said:
ive often thought some of those programs include some 'threats' to get the
hit count up, even if the 'threat' was actually extremely low. that way you
feel like its doing something.

when you're talking about counting threats, you're actually talking
about threat agents - that is things doing the threatening... naively,
the more a program detects the better, and if a vendor can add detection
for more of them then there's no real reason not to...

however, as you hint at, severity and risk are important considerations
too...

as such, you really can't criticize a product for detecting too many low
risk/low impact threat agents (which you seem to be implying), but
rather for detecting too few high risk/high impact ones...

the fact that some people only look at the raw count is not the vendor's
fault and what one person might see as trying to take advantage of those
count-checkers can also be interpreted as the vendor just doing their
job and adding the detection they're able to...
 
kurt wismer said:
when you're talking about counting threats, you're actually talking about
threat agents - that is things doing the threatening... naively, the more
a program detects the better, and if a vendor can add detection for more
of them then there's no real reason not to...

however, as you hint at, severity and risk are important considerations
too...

as such, you really can't criticize a product for detecting too many low
risk/low impact threat agents (which you seem to be implying), but rather
for detecting too few high risk/high impact ones...

the fact that some people only look at the raw count is not the vendor's
fault and what one person might see as trying to take advantage of those
count-checkers can also be interpreted as the vendor just doing their job
and adding the detection they're able to...

i dont disagree... but the fact is that if a product produces no results,
even though this should make you happy, for most people this isnt very
satisfying and doesnt encourage the purchase of the product. so there is a
fundamental conflict of interest. the companies dont put their free
versions of software out there because they feel nice...

randy
 
what exactly are the objects?

randy

sasha gottfried said:
It's just strange that the previous version (which I reinstalled) still
comes up with 20-30 "critical objects" while the 2007 version comes up
with none!
 
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