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Thursday, December 02, 2004

Spyware Removal Software Sales Exploding

I thought this post from eMarketer was quite timely since I spent a good portion of time last night removing spyware from my brother-in-law's pc. After 10 minutes of AdAware running it had found over 900 different pieces of adware and spyware... Man I hate that crap!

anti-spyware software revenues in the United States years 2003 & 2008 (in millions)
Here are some more stats from the spyware post
"A recent study by Webroot Software, a provider of corporate anti-spyware solutions, surveyed 275 IT managers and executives regarding their company's response to spyware. Although over 70% of companies have become more concerned about spyware in the past six months, 96% feel their current anti-virus and firewall software offer enough protection, and only 10% have implemented commercially available anti-spyware software. Demonstrating the ineffectiveness of this approach, about 82% of respondents' desktops have been infected with spyware."

Which Anti-Spyware Tools Do I Use?
Personally I've gotten the best results from using two pieces of spyware detection and removal software. The first is AdAware Pro. There is a free version available here but the pro version does the trick for me. The other piece of software I highly recommend is Spybot which is also free and available for download here.

Thoughts On Researching Rogue Processes
Whenever I'm not sure about a process that's running on my machine the first thing I do is Google it. As an example. While trying to figure out how bad my brother-in-law's problem was I searched Google for Wsup.exe. Then I scanned the results for a site that has the most comprehensive and concise information about spyware and adware I've ever seen. The site is liutilities. So I scanned Google's results looking for LiUtilities and found them at position 4. I clicked on their result and had the answer to my question immediately.

Here's their description of the Wsup.exe Process
wsup - wsup.exe - Process Information
Process File:
wsup or wsup.exe
Process Name: Ibis Toolbar
Description:wsup.exe is a hijacker which means it will intermittently change your Internet Explorer settings / Desktop to the link of it’s author’s sponsors. This program is usually installed through consent, however is sometimes packaged as another product. It is a registered security risk and should be removed immediately.

Author: Ibis
Part Of: Ibis Toolbar
System Process: No
Background Process: Yes
Uses Network: Yes
Hardware Related: No
Common Errors: N/A
Security Risk (0-5): 2

All of that is followed up by a pitch to purchase their spyware/adware removal program. Honestly I don't mind that at all since they've provided me with reliable information on at least 100 processes in the past 6 months. I've also got to hand it to them for creating a great value-add service to cheapskates like myself who don't want to purchase any software and at the same time they own the search engine rankings for process specific searches in Google. I wonder what their conversion ratios are :0)

Posted By Jason Dowdell at 11:07 AM
Permanent Link: Spyware Removal Software Sales Exploding | Comments (2)

(2) Comments on Spyware Removal Software Sales Exploding

Hi - Thanks for the review of www.liutilities.com (to which the main URL www.Uniblue.com redirects).

We are just launching another free web resource site (www.file-extension.com) and we thought you and your readers might also be interested in this.

The following is some info we released in our press release:
"Uniblue, the creators of the universally popular ProcessLibrary.com web resource – have launched file-extension.com file extension library. This library is a detailed database of file extensions, what they are used for, programs they are associated with, and provides information on how to fix file extension related errors.
The website is a free web-based source of information and has been developed by the Uniblue Labs team. It aligns itself with the company’s philosophy to keep the global computer-using community informed about what’s going on inside their PCs."

If you have any questions or queries please don't hesitate to contact us.

Best regards,
The PR Team

Comments by Uniblue : Monday, September 24, 2007 at 08:58 AM

They USED to have informative information at liutilities.com.

Now it sucks. Uniblue buries it behind huge numbers of pay links "Free Scan!". No useful information at all, barely a confusing process name.

This is but a shadow of they used to offer. It's stupid too, they probably could have gotten more money selling AdWords for their highly trafficed information, but instead they are abusing their high Google ranking to prseumably get a short term boost in sales. It won't last.

By offering no useful information anymore, they will drop out of the top search hits as they are no longer what people really want when searching for EXE names.

Comments by JD : Wednesday, November 14, 2007 at 12:22 AM

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