> >Throughout the EU it is wholely illegal to produce and distribute
software
> >that prohibits access to data. This legislation came about originally to
> >protect computer users from shareware that refused to operate after a
> >certain time. Nevertheless, the principle still applies.
> The principle may well apply to software which *deliberately*
> prohibits access to data but your case sounds like an uninstall which
> has gone pear shaped. Is there any evidence that symantec are
> deliberately trying to screw you?
Jim, I'm unaware of the *deliberate* aspect of this legislation. It's like
saying that a person who drives recklessly and causes the death of a
pedestrian is not guilty of an offence because they didn't mean to kill
anyone. Another analogy would be that a person who does not maintain his car
could cause a crash because one of the wheels fell off. This crash was not
an act of God, it would be the result of negligence.
Certainly, the aspect of intent is deeply embedded within the "Misuse of
Computers Act". That Act uses the notion of intent in a similar manner to
the Theft Act(s). I am not suggesting that Symantec have deliberately set
out to damage this womans computer. They have, though, knowingly distributed
software that performs operations that prohibit the uninstall process and
also creates a situation whereby the machine becomes unuseable.
> There are any number of ways you can access the data (bartpe, knoppix
> etc.) .......
I have now checked these out. I will attemp to use bartpe in the next few
hours. However, I do not expect any success in this endeavour. In this
article:
>
http://service1.symantec.com/SUPPORT...99193946440764
Symantec even admits to the world that it is interfering with the CMOS.
I suspect that there is a CMOS/MBR/NTFS (or CMOS/MBR/FAT) virus on board
along with Norton. I can not envisage any means whereby I can start the
machine without the boot sector of the hard disk being activated. If I can
remove the Norton I can then get at the virus. Norton Anti-Virus software is
actually protecting the virus.
> ...... without booting to the installed winme or you can rename
the
> system.dat and user.dat files and do a clean install of winme (without
> norton) to get at the data. I don't think complaining to the data
> protection agency is the way forward.
All I want from Symantec is one of them to email me and give me instructions
how to remove their product from a floppy disk boot. It is their code that
is preventing me from getting at the data on the machine. As nobody from
Symantec gives a damn then what should I do? Oh well, scrap the lady's
photographs of her newborn and put it down to experience. No, I won't do it.
I intend to become an absolute pain in the ass to Symantec.
Y'know, Symantec can not claim that some unknown virus is the cause of the
problem. They are the one's that are charging people so that they can
protect their data. It's like saying that a police officer can't do his job
properly because there are criminals in the area.
I'll update you on bartpe when I have tried it. From reading the web pages,
I don't think that knoppix is a correct way forward.
Clarence (Lancy) Howard
(E-Mail Removed) (remove one of the 7s)