Fact. Adware remover spyware companies are not all to be trusted!
I don't want to name names here, but I do know of a number of adware and spyware removal programs, which are actually distributed by the very people who make the adware and spyware software.
Installing free programs on your computer from an unknown small software company, which claims to rid your computer of any form of malicious programs, has got to rate right alongside poking-a-lion-with-a-short-stick.
Pests is the collective term used to describe non-viral malicious code - trojans, remote administration tools, hacker tools, and spyware. Such code can stealthily gain access to and hide on computer systems, bypassing traditional security measures such as anti-virus, firewalls, and intrusion detection systems.
Pests can allow unauthorized users to breach firewalls and access sensitive data by assuming the identity of authorized users. Pests can then allow unauthorized third parties and disgruntled insiders to access electronic assets (customer database, financial records, intellectual property, trade secrets), compromise existing security, destroy customer confidence, and expose individuals and organizations to litigation.
Pests are fundamentally different from viruses, in that they are self-contained programs rather than code fragments, and so the technology required to detect and remove them is also fundamentally different from anti-virus software. All pests share these common characteristics: most people don't know anything about them, didn't invite them in, don't know they are present, and don't want them in their system. That is the heart of the problem. With thousands of files in today's computers, no one could be expected to know what every single one does. And, without the technology to help find pests, they can live and thrive in your system for a long time before anyone finds out they're there - by which time it may be too late.
Pests have the potential to create even greater damage than viruses - including significant loss of business, legal liability, and public relations nightmares.
PestPatrol picks up on the protection of your network where current products leave off. It is designed to be used in conjunction with anti-virus software, and has little to no impact on system performance. PestPatrol, used in conjunction with an anti-virus product, offers comprehensive and reliable protection against stealthy malicious code that can result in downtime, loss of employee productivity and legal liability.
A recent example of why additional protection beyond anti-virus was the December 2001 outbreak of BadTrans B. Every anti-virus company came out with a 'quick fix' to detect and remove the worm itself, but did you know that the worm left behind a key logger that may still be hidden on systems you thought were clean? PestPatrol would have found and removed it.
Pests can do anything that software can do. Here are just a few examples:
No network administrator would be happy to find out that intellectual property, customer data or even ownership of the corporate web site has fallen into someone else's (unauthorized) hands.
Unlike viruses, however, there can be 'good' pests. That is to say, tools such as password cracking programs are an important part of the system administrator's toolkit, but in the wrong hands, password crackers can allow unauthorized individuals to access confidential data unchallenged. PestPatrol deals with this "gray area" by enabling you to detect the presence of such a tool only if it's on a PC where you would not expect to find it - in the accounting or sales departments, for example.
Many factors conspire to make today's computer systems a fertile environment for pest growth.
The real problem is that the rate of emergence of pests is increasing. The table and graph below report on the growth of pests in both number of megabytes of pests and total number, by creation date.

Anti-virus vendors have added detection capabilities for some high-profile pests. They just haven't added it very well or with any degree of thoroughness or consistency. There are two main reasons for this:
There have been many pests in the news recently. In fact, they sometimes seem to be "stealing the show" from viruses. For example, the "SubSeven Defcon8 2.1 backdoor trojan" is a trojan, not a virus.
Anti-virus is not enough
Anti-virus software detects some pests, particularly those that have made the news. But generally, the pest detection rates of anti-virus software are pretty low. To illustrate this, we asked the National Software Testing Laboratory (NSTL) to test PestPatrol's pest detection capabilities against the three major anti-virus software packages - Norton AntiVirus, McAfee, and PC-Cillin. Here is a summary of their findings:
"PestPatrol clearly detects more pests in every category than any other product tested by finding 86% of the pests. PC-Cillin 2000 came in a distant second, finding 55%. Although no product, in its default state, detected every available pest, it is clear which product provides the better protection.
"Our testing indicates that pest detection, unlike virus detection, has not been given strong enough attention by the computer industry. This may be due to the fact that pests tend to run silently, and users often don't even know that their systems are infected. So there is no big outcry by infected owners for remediation or prevention. As more people become aware of pests and see the damage that they can do, there should be increased demand for effective products to detect and clean pests.
"Currently, products tend to do their best detection with trojan-type pests - detecting a larger percentage of them. Pests used for hacking or performing Denial of Services, were only modestly detected by the majority of products. Only PestPatrol was able to detect any spyware pests."

Use of anti-virus software is not enough, as many experts have recently argued. "Antivirus software still does an excellent job of protecting against viruses in the wild; however, other products, in association with corporate security policy, are now becoming increasingly important to safeguard the network and critically sensitive corporate data." - Datapro
Anti-virus technology is not well-suited for detecting pests
Viruses do not "install" themselves in a machine. They do not normally examine the registry, nor do they make changes to it. They do not reconfigure the machine to ensure that they run at next boot. The challenge with a virus is to remove it from the objects it has infected, returning them to a fully functional state.
Trojans usually do install themselves in a machine. They frequently modify the registry, and sometimes also modify .ini files, such as win.ini. Deleting a trojan will cause a problem if the registry calls for a missing file to be run. Unlike virus removal, removing a trojan may require editing the registry.
Because a trojan appears to all intents and purposes to be a normal uninfected program, and lacks jumps, there is no convenient section of a few thousand bytes from which a detection scan string might be extracted. To detect a trojan with a scan string is not difficult. To do so without false alarming on non-trojans is a great deal more difficult.
PestPatrol scans your system, looking specifically for malicious code. It currently can detect some 32,000 pests, and the database continues to grow. PestPatrol is designed to be very fast and can scan 33,000 files per minute.
How does PestPatrol differ from anti-virus software?
PestPatrol is not an anti-virus product and it will not remove viruses. PestPatrol looks for and detects other malicious code, including trojans, hacker tools, Denial-of-Service agents, and spyware. Since anti-virus products focus on viruses, PestPatrol used in conjunction with an anti-virus product offers complete and reliable protection from the full complement of malicious code that might result in downtime, loss of employee productivity and dissemination of dangerous code.
How does PestPatrol stay current?
We have created a number of tools that automatically manage the PestPatrol database, trapping new malicious code and constantly updating the database. Such new files are downloaded and automatically analyzed.
Information on how to remove this malicious code from the registry, from ini files, and from the file system is automatically added to our PestPatrol.dat database. The database is automatically posted to the web site so that users of PestPatrol have access to the latest strings; the product looks for updates and downloads them automatically, too. The result: PestPatrol can detect a pest within a few minutes of its availability on the Internet and have the necessary removal information immediately available.
Compatibility with anti-virus
PestPatrol is designed to work with anti-virus software, not instead of it. This design required that several conditions be met:
PestPatrol benefits
PestPatrol is fast because its detection algorithms are specifically built for pest detection. At the time of writing, the database contains 11 different pieces of information on each of 32,000 different pests - over 350,000 information elements.
PestPatrol is flexible, with powerful command line capabilities to facilitate scheduling, network-wide scanning (including systems connecting to corporate servers via VPN), reporting, and updating.
Pest Patrol combines speed, a mature database and automated updating capability offering complete and reliable protection from dangerous code.
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