A "false positive" normally connotes imprecise calibration. What's imprecise
here?

The details on the culprit (found in the Registry) read:

HKU\S-1-5-21-3126995848-1559877500-2177672217-1005-SOFTWARE\RIT\THEBAT!\

Why would Trend mistake only The Bat! (out of all the other programs on my
computer) as "spyware"?

I've added this item to the Trend "whitelist," and The Bat! runs just fine
now.

However, I'm still uncomfortable with the idea that The Bat! may be spying
on me.

Could someone please try to do a better job of comforting me?

Maybe it's not Trend's problem?

Couldn't it be something that The Bat! is doing, that it shouldn't be doing?



On 6/28/06, Jernej Simonèiè <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Wednesday, June 28, 2006, 18:43:44, Joe wrote:

> So my question is, why does The Bat have to spy on me?

Because somebody at TrendMicro didn't do his homework. It's called a false
positive, and it's nothing unusual with modern anti-spyware programs.

--
< Jernej Simonèiè ><><><><>< http://deepthought.ena.si/ >

Industry always moves in to fill an economic vacuum.
       -- Tuccille's First Law of Reality


________________________________________________
Current version is 3.80.06 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html




--
Joe
________________________________________________
Current version is 3.80.06 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

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