* Abethebabe:
I wanted to know if there was a way I could get a Python program to
run off of my flash drive as soon as the computer (Windows) detected
the device?

For example I could have a a simple program that would create a text
document on the computers desktop when my flash drive is detected.

As long as its your own computer, no problem.

However, in the war between the corporate "we own your computer" and the individual's "I think the computer's mine" (so eloquently expressed as the main goal of the 70's Smalltalk project, to bring effective computing to the masses) the arms race is currently stuck at a point where any computer-literate person running Windows turns off the various run-automatically features as soon as they're sneak-introduced by Windows service packs and IE updates and whatever. I don't know, but I think there are six or seven such schemes. Happily, as far as I know they can all be turned off. If not for this then the recording industry could have sued a lot of people in Norway. But our laws require copy protection schemes to be effective, and a scheme based on a feature that most intelligent persons have turned off isn't effective, so wrt. law it's like it's not there.

I think it was EMI who once distributed a nasty rootkit (and yes, it was theirs, it was not an accident) as a copy protection scheme on a music CD. Getting a lot of bad publicity for that they and other record companies didn't back off but continued with just less malware-like auto run protection. I was perplexed when I learned that one CD with Madrugada, that I'd copied to my hard disk, was supposedly protected this way. Sure enough, there was this sticker on it. However, since the idiot scheme they used was based on auto-run I never noticed.


Cheers,

- Alf
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