I’m not complaining about Acast! here but I am wondering about why it hasn’t been seeing all of this stuff.
I was reading a thread earlier today and ran across a mention of a product named “Xoftspy” so after researching it on spyware worrier I rushed on off to download it.
When I ran it I was amazed at what it came back with. As almost everything was in one folder I scanned that folder with Avast! and Ewido, both of which came back clean.
So can you guys tell me if any of this points down stuff is something that I need to worry about?And if it is, what the heck should I do with it?
Me personally I would get rid of xoftspy and use some of the programs on the trusworthy list.
Or these which are regularly suggested as a minimum all freeware:
If you haven’t already got this software (freeware), download, install, update and run it.
Note on XoftSpy: XoftSpy was listed on this page because of concerns with false positives (1, 2, 3, 4), questionable license terms, and the use of aggressive, deceptive advertising (1, 2), including exploitation of the name "spybot" by affiliates. Earlier versions of XoftSpy were also Ad-aware knockoffs. (There was clone of XoftSpy named SpyBurn, but that application is no longer available.) Over the past few months, XoftSpy has taken aggressive steps to reign in its affiliates (who were primarily responsible for the unsavory advertising), revised its license text, and released a new version of XoftSpy (version 4.0) that addresses our concerns with false positves. Given these changes we can no longer regard XoftSpy as "rogue/suspect" anti-spyware.
As far as I’ve seen, McAfee is probably the only antivirus that detects Viewpoint as Potentially Unwanted Program, but as its name says, it’s potentially unwanted program, not a virus.
XoftSPy has been on the rogue list for a long time. Do NOT trust the results:
Note on XoftSpy: XoftSpy was listed on this page because of concerns with false positives (1, 2, 3, 4), questionable license terms, and the use of aggressive, deceptive advertising (1, 2), including exploitation of the name "spybot" by affiliates. Earlier versions of XoftSpy were also Ad-aware knockoffs. (There was clone of XoftSpy named SpyBurn, but that application is no longer available.)
Eddy is right here, XoftSPy is to be considered coming with adware at least.
Read about this questionable program, and why it was not taken off the rogue-list here: http://www.adwarereport.com/mt/archives/000014.html
To Eddy. They claim XoftSPY is not the old program anymore, and turned more decent.
SpywareGuide does not list it anymore. I question why, some they could
not flag any longer because of lawsuits. I would not like to give it the green
light now, like Spyware Warrior does. A fox gets older, but in most cases
does not loose his tricks, as we say in Holland.
Whenever you use removal programs, you should check their reliability.
I think Eddy is a good source to ask whenever in doubt,
and there are some more of these sources here on the forum.
Using foistware can cost you the stability of your computer, and sometimes even worse.
Hi Eddy, and polonus, Thanks for your comments. No I didn’t trust it from the time that I found out that spyware warrior had had it in the no good list.
Foxes never forget their old tricks, they just learn new ways to get into the hen house.
I used the windows add/remove thing to remove it from my system, is there anything else that I should do to make sure that I have wiped it out?
Yes wendy, you did it all according to the book. This is just the foistware type of malware, that means that it is trying to scare you in buying their crap. And that is what most malware is about these days, to rip people of what is in their purses - money.
Never download a thing before checking on it, use McAfeeSiteAdvisor in your browser, the Netcraft anti-phishing toolbar, search with Google or with www.scandoo.com, and leave the insecure sites for what they are, swamp ground and malware ridden or full of evil script. That is why I advise people to browse in Firefox or Flock (last version) with the NoScript add-on activated.