 eburger68 Premium,MVM join:2001-04-28
2 edits | reply to MattUK Re: Spyware Docter - Another Rogue?
Hi All:
Spyware Doctor from PC Tools is a completely legitimate anti-spyware utility. It's installed on on my box right now, and I test with it regularly.
Sashwa, the vast majority of the detections reported by Spyware Doctor in your scan appear to be legitimate detections, not false positives.
The first 10 detections are cookies. I've long advocated that anti-spyware utilities move cookie management out of the threat scanner and into a separate utility, but these aren't false positives per se -- they're simply cookies that Spyware Dcotor is offering to remove for you.
The next several detections all involve CLSIDs that appear to be legitimate detections. These Registry keys are probably just remnants left behind from previous infestations or installations. Nothing serious, but they don't appear to be false positives.
D94AAA2A-C415-42E3-82B6-49FAB4EBFFE9 - see: »sarc.com/avcenter/venc/data/adwa···mon.html
15AD4789-CDB4-47E1-A9DA-992EE8E6BAD6 - see: »sarc.com/avcenter/venc/data/pf/a···ind.html
C1E58A84-95B3-4630-B8C2-D06B77B7A0FC - see: »castlecops.com/tk524-Nhelper_dll.html »www3.ca.com/securityadvisor/pest···53074928
42F2C9BA-614F-47C0-B3E3-ECFD34EED658 - see: »securityresponse.symantec.com/av···bar.html
The last reported detection does indeed appear to be a false positive ( SahAgent C:\Program Files\EmotiPad Plus\Cache\smile_omfg.gif). I would suggest reporting it to PC Tools.
A few comments, if I may (and these are directed at no one in particular).
1) Don't assume that because you think you have a malware-free box that any reported detections by an anti-malware utility must be false positives. Do some research yourself and look into the reported detections. Until you do that, you can't say one way or the other what the detections are.
2) The mere existence of false positives does not make an anti-malware utility "rogue," because all anti-malware utilities will have false positives at some point. You've got to evaluate those false positives by asking:
- How common are the false positives? - What were the causes of false positives? A poorly designed scan engine, bad data, or researcher error? - How diligent is the vendor in soliciting reports of false positives, testing for false positives, and correcting those false positives in a timely manner?
Not all false positives are created equal.
In any case, I hope the above has been of help.
Edit: looks like this may be a bit more complicated than I first assumed. All of those CLSIDs were listed in this key:
HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Ext\Stats\
I'm still trying to find good info on just what that key is used for, but it appears to be an XP SP2 key, possibly a place where IE keeps track of the ActiveX controls that it has downloaded and/or installed. The data in this key appears to be harmless, but just what caused the keys to be created in the first place is still not clear. At the very least the ClSIDs do match known pieces of spyware/adware.
Best,
Eric L. Howes |