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Anti-Keystroke-Logging
Software
John C.
Dvorak, Contributing
Editor, PC Magazine
If your paranoia
goes deeper, make
sure to look at
some of the anti-keystroke-logging
software. The
best I've seen
so far is SpyCop,
available online
at www.NetEspion.com.
It scours your
system, looking
for secret keystroke-logging
software. The
like-named company
also makes Evidence
Terminator, which
routinely erases
cookies and all
sorts of files
that can be used
to track your
activities. Welcome
to the Big Brother
century—when we
can't trust our
own computers
anymore... |
Keep
yourself top secret! How
to defeat spyware
David Coursey, Executive
Editor, ZDNET AnchorDesk
...BUT TAKE HEART. You
are not defenseless in
the fight against keystroke
loggers. A program called
SpyCop is designed specifically
to head off corporate
spying programs, unlike
antivirus and desktop
security programs that
can capture only some
spy programs. For $49.95
(sale price), it offers
very inexpensive protection,
and says it can detect
and defeat 181 different
keystroke loggers. Its
makers also offer a version
of SpyCop that includes
Evidence Terminator, a
program that removes files
from your PC that provide
clues as to your online
habits and movements...
Komando
Show's Shareware Pick
of the Week (10-27-01)
Komando.com
Are you being snooped?
Is your every key entry
and mouse click recorded?
There are more than 100
programs that can be used
to monitor your computer
activities, but now you
can out-snoop the spies
by using this program
to ferret out hidden spy
programs on your system.
Scan your entire system
and get automatic updates
to the spy program database
(with the full version)
or check out individual,
suspicious applications.
Spyware
Wilders.org
SpyCop is (payware) software
to detect spyware, but
mainly todetect and clean
a personal system from
these kind of computer
activity recording products,
that could have been installed
on your system without
your knowledge or approval.
Spycop has a database
of 175+ of such monitoring
programs. It allows inspection,
renaming suspect files,
save and print results.
and comes with a LiveUpdate
function and detectable
database. We have
tested Spycop v3.0 using
a database of 50 monitoring
programs; Spycop detected
them all.
Keyboard
Monitors Fuel Online Paranoia
By Becky Worley,
Tech TV.com
SpyCop is a program that
has a frequently updated
list of key logger programs.
Use the simple user interface
to scan your computer
for spy programs. Once
scanned, SpyCop generates
a simple report of programs
and suspicious files.
It even scrambles any
screenshots of its interface
that a monitoring program
tries to capture.
As an added benefit,
SpyCop will also search
your computer for spyware
(a program that reports
your Internet habits to
companies gathering demographic
information).
I give SpyCop my unofficial
thumbs up. It seems to
be the easiest and most
effective way to find
out if you are being monitored.
SPOT
THE SPY !
Laptop Magazine
Computer interconnectivity
has opened a world of
possibilities, and our
lives are more convenient
because of it. One trade-off,
however, is that it's
now possible for prying
eyes to monitor virtually
every action you take
on your computer. SpyCop
offers a way to monitor
the software that might
be monitoring you.
The free version of SpyCop
can be downloaded from
the company's Web site,
and will scan your files
for any trace of monitoring
software. It indicates
which files allow others
to spy on you, so you
know what to delete.
The corporate version,
also available from the
SpyCop Web site, costs
$69 (sale price) and not
only spots the monitoring
software on your computer,
but removes it for you.
SpyCop is constantly updated
to offer fresh protection
against the latest spyware
innovations.
SpyCop is intended for
Windows 95, 98, and Me,
and requires a 486 or
faster processor. 16MB
of memory is also required,
although 32MB or more
is recommended.
SpyCop
Reveals All
Info Security News
& SC Magazine
SpyCop has developed
an anti-surveillance package
of the same name that
counters so-called spy
software.
Such software, the firm
claims, is inserted on
to a PC's hard disk using
an executable attachment
along with a carrier email.
Once installed, the firm
says that the software
is very difficult to detect,
even with existing IT
security applications.
In use, the package will
scan any PC-based computer
for surveillance software
and will alert computer
owners if they are being
spied upon.
The Delaware, US-based
company says that SpyCop
uses a brute force scanning
system that examines all
files, hidden or otherwise,
for computer monitoring
software.
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