Monthly Archive for December, 2008

Preying on ignorance

I’ve been spending a bit of time looking into something that has bothered me for awhile. I refer to it as “Predatory Utility Software”, or “PUS”.

On Christmas day, I received two pieces of spam. These were admirable because they were able to defeat SpamSieve (my favorite software purchase of 2008). They were frustrating because they offered a piece of… software called “Error Nuker”.

For years, I’ve been telling people that so-called “registry cleaners” don’t do anything, and in fact can be the single most destructive tool you can run in Windows. One bad edit, and you can kill Windows.

I’m not even going to delve into the method that many tools like this use to spread themselves. While not “malware” in the truest sense of the word, spamming novice users, and confusing them to the point that they download tools like this should be illegal.

Windows gets “cruft” in the registry and occasionally in the filesystem over time with the installation, uninstallation, and updating of applications and Windows itself. The thing is, though this cruft in the registry causes your registry hive files to grow in size, it is benign. Tools such as this that lie to users and tell them that “errors” will occur are frankly more malignant than the actual problem they feign to solve.

I ran “Error Nuker” on a test Windows VM. It took quite a bit of time to “scan” my system, telling me each of the locations it was scanning. But you know what? In the end, all it did was point out locations in the registry that referenced files on the disk that were no longer there.

Now, it’s important to note that dead links from the registry are usually the result of uninstalling the application that put them there*. Meaning that, the only thing that cares that the link is dead is the application or application(s) that are no longer there! Meaning it does nothing!

*This tool also calls out files in Most Recently Used (MRU) menu locations in Windows – which if you are like me, you edit, send, and delete documents like crazy. But these MRU links being dead is hardly what I’d call an error condition.

“Error Nuker” is something like $20-$49 (depends on which spammer you get solicited by, I guess). Frankly, it isn’t worth free. It literally does nothing, and although it has a safe delete option, the fact that it is just a glorified registry cleaner means it’s effectively useless. An analogy? Do you think washing your car will make it go faster? Me either.

I’ve seen worse “PUS” – specifically the kind that is truly malware. But it’s really a shame that we’ve gotten to this point, where Windows users will fall prey to junk software pimping itself as fixing Windows’ problems.


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Siriusly?

SiriusXM’s stock is officially on the floor. And it’s had me thinking why – as I’ve been pondering canceling my own subscription.

Since Howard Stern went to Sirius in 2006, he has been talking big about the death of “terrestrial radio”. But I think it’s bigger than that. With iTunes, a growing selection of on-demand media (think of all of the places you can on-demand movies from), and to a smaller extent, the growing reliability of Internet-based music and media channels, the threat posed to both traditional radio and SiriusXM is real. Add to that the shrinking volume of disposable consumer dollars, and SiriusXM is as hosed as “terrestrial media”.

Honestly, the music selection of SiriusXM isn’t that spectacular – the playlists repeat more often than they should, and the variety means that personally, I have about maybe 15 channels, tops, that I ever listen to. The sole breadwinner that they have is truly unique broadcasters – such as Howard, Oprah, and Martha… I listen to Howard for the whole rubbernecking factor – just to see what happens next (and frankly I’m ashamed of myself :-) ).

But it’s getting harder and harder for me to validate paying for SIriusXM – when Howard and a few other channels are all I would miss – and I have to think, post-acquisition, that many Sirius, and LOTS of XM subscribers, feel the same.


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