So how is it disabled?  Also, how is the Search Assistant
disabled, if it can be without messing things up.

Another thing I noticed that Sygate is seeing is DLL's constantly
being loaded in the background with XP.  Is this normal?
-Clint

God Bless Us All
Clint Hamilton, Owner
Want to exchange links with us?
http://OrpheusComputing.com �

----- Original Message -----
From: "Peter Kaulback" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Ralph and others,

I oversaw a recent conference where some officials from MS were
touting
these exact benefits(?) of win2k SP3 and XP SP1 but going on to
say that
the user has final say in disabling the service in the
background. However
they did announce that this user capability would be removed in
all future
software releases from Redmond.

That was left hanging with no follow up, except to say that it
would make
for a happier and more content user base that would not have to
contend
with continual patches and fixes. Sure.

I wouldn't want some appliance maintenance crew coming into my
home when
I'm at work without my knowledge and I wouldn't want MS to do the
same when
I'm not at my computers. Just because MS says something to this
affect in
their EULA (End User License Agreement) does not make it right or
even legal.

In the spring of 2002 the group vice president of platforms Jim
Allchin
(http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/exec/jim/default.asp) at MS
disclosed
in the DOJ hearings that the windows software was so flawed that
it's
disclosure could threaten US national security
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,5264,00.asp

In Canada here our government is following suit as legislation is
moving
forward to force all ISP's to keep a record of all user traffic
for 6
months. To put this into perspective one ISP said the users have
1 - 3 gigs
of traffic a month and over 6 months this would amount to 6 - 18
gigs of
data. Multiply this number by the user base and you end up
requiring
terabytes (1000 gigs) of storage space just in case the local
security
officials want to have a gander at someone's activities. Imagine
AOL
backing up the data from 30 million plus subscribers :>

Peter Kaulback


In the hour of 10:59 PM 11/03/2003 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
spoke this:
>Clint and others,
>
>Well, I think it was in a recent article in InfoWorld, by Brian
>Livingston or similar high tech guru, that a really MAJOR
eye-opener got
>revealed. If you can get to the web sites for InfoWorld,
ComputerWorld,
>and other similiar computer news sites, you might want to
subscribe to
>gettting emails from such individuals, since the info they end
up
>knowing is absolutely mind bodgling.
>
>Seems that when you install SP1 for XP or SP3 for 2K, you give,
as part
>of the legal gobbaldygook, unconditional right for MS to
automatically
>update the OS withOUT you having to give any ok to what it
decides to do
>in the background.
>
>So what this amounts to is that even if you get the SP from some
other
>location, it will not matter since to install it, you have to
agress to
>the licensing info, and this is one of the issues contained in
the SP
>licensing info.
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