Author |
Message |
qlklege041
Joined: 19 Jul 2013
Posts: 9718
Read: 0 topics
Warns: 0/10 Location: England
|
|
louboutin pas cher A Deeper Check Out Coupons |
|
Coupons.com provides users coupons which they can print at house, then redeem at retailers.
Coupons.com particularly promises users that they might "use as many [coupons] as [they] like." But actually, Coupons.com takes great pains to limit how many coupons users can print. Rather than simply letting users print GIF or JPG coupons from a regular internet page, Coupons.com requires that [url=http://www.lofw.fora.pl/forum-testowe,1/hollister-significant-aspect-to-find-out-for-all-h,5344.html#5754]hollister Significant Aspect To Find Out For All H[/url] users install a coupon-printing ActiveX control. Coupons.com also customizes each coupon [url=http://www.rtnagel.com/louboutin.php]louboutin pas cher[/url] with information about who printed it and once. These design decisions increase the complexity of Coupons.com's business -- giving rise to the significant consent and privacy issues put down below. [url=http://www.mansmanifesto.fr]doudoune moncler[/url]
Each of [url=http://www.achbanker.com/home.php]www.achbanker.com/home.php[/url] these entries consisted of a 30 to 90-letter string of gibberish. For example, the contents of uccspecc.sys precisely matched the contents of the very first [url=http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?campid=5336182395&customid=pubster&toolid=10013&mpre=http%3A//cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/4pcs-LED-Tyre-Tire-Valve-Caps-Neon-Lights-Bike-Car-New-/220639832483]moncler outlet How To Get A F[/url] 3 registry entries: HtmWSrewvuaCGtKrVlXxMKdbMkLfgHq.
Other people have also noticed these oddly-named files. For example, McAfee SiteAdvisor reports each [url=http://www.achbanker.com/home.php]hollister france[/url] and every file and registry entry Coupons.com creates.
These Coupons.com filenames and registry keys are deceptive, for a [url=http://www.thehygienerevolution.com/barbour.php]barbour paris[/url] minimum of 3 different factors.
1) The labels falsely recommend that the components are component of Windows, instead of [url=http://www.ilyav.com/uggpascher.php]boots ugg pas cher[/url] third-party add-ins. For instance, the files and registry keys they fit in locations reserved for Windows itself, not for third-party applications. Furthermore, Coupons.com's option of filename and registry keys affirmatively misrepresents the function of the specified components.
2)The labels falsely suggest that the components are system files. For instance, the .SYS [url=http://www.mquin.com/giuseppezanotti.php]giuseppe zanotti sneakers[/url] file extension has an unique meaning to Windows (e.g. for device drivers and other program components), but the Coupons.com file serves no such "system" function. Registry keys as to (supposed) Explorer AutoTray, URL encoding, and folder presentation settings all recommend intuitive meanings. But Coupons.com goes on to use these keys for a purpose unrelated to their names.
3) The labels are confusingly comparable to genuine Windows components. For example, WindowsShell.Manifest is really a bona fide Windows file, but Coupons.com's "WindowsShellOld.manifest.1" (emphasis added) [url=http://www.dqlkx.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=8536353]hollister france Malgré une croissance XXL en Allemagne, les rémunérations[/url] doesn't have relationship [url=http://www.vivid-host.com/barbour.htm]barbour uk[/url] whatsoever with that file (and is certainly not an "old" version of that file). Similarly, the HKLMSoftwareMicrosoftWindowsCurrentVersionInternet SettingsURLEncoding registry key is required by Internet Explorer, creating Coupons' option of the comparable URLDecoding (emphasis added) particularly likely to confuse typical users.
Coupons.com's option of registry keys and filenames has a clear purpose and effect: To deter users from deleting the specified keys and files. Even amongst users sophisticated sufficient to manually delete unwanted files and registry keys, the chosen registry keys and filenames look so official that removal appears unwise. The conventional result is that users will elect to retain these files, mistakenly concluding that these files are part of Windows.
Coupons.com's deceptive filenames flout business norms. For example, the Anti-Spyware Coalition's Best Practices invite anti-spyware vendors to consider whether a program's "files have easy-to-understand names and are simple for users to find on their computers" -- a test Coupons.com clearly fails. Anti-spyware statutes in Texas and Arkansas particularly prohibit deceptively-named files and registry entries that prevent users from removing software, and TRUSTe Trusted Download rules (which bind Coupons.com as a Trusted Download sealholder) also prohibit deceptive naming to steer clear of removal. These Texas, Arkansas, and [url=http://www.1855sacramento.com/woolrich.php]woolrich outlet[/url] TRUSTe requirements admittedly limit their prohibitions to deceptively-named "software" and to deception that hinders program removal. Maybe Coupons.com manages to escape these rules by deceptively naming its configuration files (rather than its executable code) or by making its executable code (though not its configuration files) easy to eliminate. Nonetheless, these authorities reveal the public's discomfort with deceptive naming. If users are to know what's on their computers and why, vendors must name their files in a way reasonable users can understand. Yet Coupons.com intentionally does exactly the opposite..
Finally, [url=http://www.maximoupgrade.com/hot.php]hollister france[/url] Coupons.com's sneaky tactics continue to undermine its standing within the security [url=http://www.gotprintsigns.com/hollisterpascher/]hollister paris[/url] community. Some leading [url=http://www.mquin.com/giuseppezanotti.php]giuseppe zanotti pas cher[/url] anti-spyware programs now detect Coupons.com -- and rightly so, in my view. Users with Coupons.com software deserve additional info -- not forthcoming from Coupons.com -- about what the software program does and why users might not want it.
The post has been approved 0 times
|
|
Sun 7:59, 22 Sep 2013 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
|
|