I'm certain that Spynet will remain optional--last stats I heard were that
about half of installs opted in.
You'll be happy to hear that the "clicking bug" you describe is fixed in
build .509, which you can download from:
http://www.microsoft.com/spyware/software (and a few clicks beyond)
Just run the installer--it will perform an upgrade.
Thanks for taking the time to offer these useful observations!
--
FAQ for Microsoft Antispyware:
http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm
"Peter" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:24c901c51f94$9fafb300$(E-Mail Removed)...
> My thoughts on MS AntiSpyware:
>
> Updater:
> The update utility should be accessible without having to
> open the whole program, or the update function should check
> whenever you go online, not just at one specific time.
>
> Menus:
> The top-level menu bar should be a standard menu bar like
> every other Windows program. Check for Updates should be
> under something other than File. Maybe there shouldn't be
> a File menu.
>
> SpyNet:
> I hope the checkbox stays there - I don't always want to
> send data to SpyNet, if it's just because of me fiddling
> around. It's nice that it's checked by default, though.
>
> Clicking bug:
> Clicking on "Spyware Scan" (the title) when a scan is
> running aborts the scan. Why, I don't know. There is no
> indication that it should or that it will.
>
> Summary screen:
> The colour of the stars indicating something good should be
> changed. A yellow star means, to me, that something needs
> attention at a convenient time. Maybe something like a
> green checkmark would work better.
>
> Bonus feature:
> It would be REALLY, REALLY nice if MSAS could run a scan as
> a background low-cpu-usage process that could be paused and
> resumed manually and at system startup/shutdown quietly.
> It could also alert the user if it needed some dedicated
> time to meet the "one scan every 5 days" ideal MS has given us.