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Group publishes anti-spyware guidelines.


A coalition of anti-spyware vendors and consumer groups have published guidelines to help consumers assess products designed to combat unwanted programs that sneak onto computers. The Anti-Spyware Coalition The Anti-Spyware Coalition (ASC) is a group dedicated to building a consensus about definitions and best practices in the debate surrounding spyware and other potentially unwanted technologies.  released the guidelines for public comment and also updated a separate document that attempted to croft CROFT, obsolete. A little close adjoining to a dwelling-house, and enclosed for pasture or arable, or any particular use. Jacob's Law Dict.  uniform definitions for spyware" and "adware" in hopes of giving computer users more control over their machines. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Pew Internet and American Life Project, Internet users Internet user ninternauta m/f

Internet user Internet ninternaute m/f 
 have become more cautious online because of worries about spyware and adware, which can bombard bom·bard  
tr.v. bom·bard·ed, bom·bard·ing, bom·bards
1. To attack with bombs, shells, or missiles.

2. To assail persistently, as with requests. See Synonyms at attack, barrage2.

3.
 users with pop-up ads and drain processing power to the point of rendering computers unusable. Nearly half of adult online Americans have stopped visiting specific Web sites that they fear might infect them with such unwanted programs, and a quarter have ceased to use file-sharing software, which often comes bundled with adware. In addition, 43 percent of Interact users say they've been hit with spyware, adware or both, with broadband users generally at greater risk, The new guidelines from the coalition assign risk levels to various practices common with spyware and adware. High-risk practices include installation without a user's permission or knowledge, interference with competing programs, interception of e-mail and instant-messaging conversations and the display of ads without identifying the program that generated them. Changing a browser's home page or search engine setting is deemed a medium risk, while using data files called cookies to collect information is considered a low risk. "Although all behaviors can be problematic if unauthorized, certain ones tend to have a greater impact and are treated with more severity than others," the guidelines say. The idea is to agree on what practices consumers should worry most about. Within the general rankings, individual vendors still have leeway lee·way  
n.
1. The drift of a ship or an aircraft to leeward of the course being steered.

2. A margin of freedom or variation, as of activity, time, or expenditure; latitude. See Synonyms at room.
 to assign their own weight to each behavior in deciding whether to quarantine quarantine (kwŏr`əntēn), isolation of persons, animals, places, and effects that carry or are suspected of harboring communicable disease.  or remove a program when detected.

The coalition also offers similar rankings on consent. High marks go to programs that are distributed as separate downloads in clearly labeled packages, while those that try to bury what they do in legalese legalese - Dense, pedantic verbiage in a language description, product specification, or interface standard; text that seems designed to obfuscate and requires a language lawyer to parse it.  are given low ratings.

The commenting period on the guidelines ended November 27.

The guidelines could encourage industry "best practices" that developers of adware and other programs could follow to avoid getting flagged by anti-spyware vendors. However, the coalition has yet to set a timetable for defining such practices, said Ari Schwartz of the Center for Democracy and Technology, which led the coalition. Nonetheless, Schwartz said, Thursday's announcements represent a start toward long- term improvements in anti-spyware tools and consumer education.

"There won't be as much gray area, and we'll have more transparency out there," he said. A separate coalition document defining spyware and related terms changed little from the draft issued in July. The updated definitions document, reflecting nearly 400 comments received from the public, still flags as potential threats--an umbrella definition that includes spyware, adware and other categories such as "hijackers" and "cookies"--programs that:

* impair users' control over their systems, including privacy and security,- * impair the use of system resources (1) In a computer system, system resources are the components that provide its inherent capabilities and contribute to its overall performance. System memory, cache memory, hard disk space, IRQs and DMA channels are examples. , including what programs are installed on their computers; and/or collect, use and distribute personal or otherwise sensitive information.

But by classifying "adware" as falling under the umbrella term A term used to cover a broad category of functions rather than one specific item. In many cases, a term is so catchy that it tends to be used for technologies that are a stretch from the original concept. See middleware and virtualization. , "Spyware and Other Potentially Unwanted

Technologies," the coalition avoided a key dispute that has led to lawsuits by adware developers against anti-spyware vendors: Is adware a form of spyware or are the two separate?
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Title Annotation:Security News
Publication:Database and Network Journal
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:567
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