Pop-up blocker

  • Thread starter Thread starter Thomas
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T

Thomas

I recently asked for advice on spyware prevention and you
pointed me toward some very good applications..thank you
very much! I downloaded Spybot S&D, Adaware 6 Personal,
and Spyblaster. Will these applications block popus or
are there other application more geared toward this
problem. As I asked last time, how much should I be
paying for whatever it is you recommend?
 
In
Thomas said:
I recently asked for advice on spyware prevention and you
pointed me toward some very good applications..thank you
very much! I downloaded Spybot S&D, Adaware 6 Personal,
and Spyblaster. Will these applications block popus or
are there other application more geared toward this
problem. As I asked last time, how much should I be
paying for whatever it is you recommend?


No. Spyware and popups are two different things. The free Google
toolbar works well as a popup blocker.
 
Hello Thomas,

I have tried a couple of "stand-alone" pop-up blockers in the past and while I'm sure they were good at their jobs, I found them quite cumbersome to use if you suddenly found that you needed to allow a pop-up. Maybe I was just being lazy.
I now have the Google toolbar installed which does a grand job and is also a good additional search utility.

hope this helps

C.
 
Thanks for the help!
-----Original Message-----
Hello Thomas,

I have tried a couple of "stand-alone" pop-up blockers
in the past and while I'm sure they were good at their
jobs, I found them quite cumbersome to use if you
suddenly found that you needed to allow a pop-up. Maybe I
was just being lazy.
I now have the Google toolbar installed which does a
grand job and is also a good additional search utility.
 
Thanks for the help !
-----Original Message-----
In


No. Spyware and popups are two different things. The free Google
toolbar works well as a popup blocker.

--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
Please reply to the newsgroup


.
 
The Mozilla option offered above will only work if you
are using the Mozilla browser. If you use Internet
Explorer, there is a really good popup blocker available
that I have used for years. It is easy to use, flexible,
and allows you to modify what you want to block. It is
called popup killer. I like the old version 1.45.4.
Google download PUK 1.45.4 and you will get it. You can
also Google popup killer and I think about the first site
that comes up is the original developer xFx Jumpstart.
You don't want the new product, though. On the left hand
panel you will see a link to BooHoo's Help Page. There
you will find a link to download that Blacklist. You
can't use the link there to download PUK 1.45.4 because
the link is dead. When you install popup killer, on the
menu, you will select Black List, then Merge, then you
will browse to the location where you downloaded the list
(I would just download it to your Desktop). You can set
its Preferences so that if it closes your browser (say
because you accidentally surfed onto a xxx site), it will
automatically reopen to a specified home page. If you
find it closes a window that you don't want closed, you
can disable PUK temporarily. You can even then open it
and see the site you are on in a window which gives you
the option to exclude it from the Black List. I have
tried a lot of popup blockers, but none is as good as
this one.
 
Greetings --

There are at least three varieties of pop-ups, and the solutions
vary accordingly. Which specific type(s) is troubling you?

1) Does the title bar of these pop-ups read "Messenger Service?"

This type of spam has become quite common over the past several
months, and unintentionally serves as a valid security "alert." It
demonstrates that you haven't been taking sufficient precautions while
connected to the Internet. Your data probably hasn't been compromised
by these specific advertisements, but if you're open to this exploit,
you may well be open to other threats, such as the Blaster Worm that
recently swept cross the Internet. Install and use a decent,
properly configured firewall. (Merely disabling the messenger
service, as some people recommend, only hides the symptom, and does
little or nothing to truly secure your machine.) And ignoring or just
"putting up with" the security gap represented by these messages is
particularly foolish.

Messenger Service of Windows
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=KB;en-us;168893

Messenger Service Window That Contains an Internet Advertisement
Appears
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=330904

Stopping Advertisements with Messenger Service Titles
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/pro/using/howto/communicate/stopspam.asp

Blocking Ads, Parasites, and Hijackers with a Hosts File
http://www.mvps.org/winhelp2002/hosts.htm

Oh, and be especially wary of people who advise you to do nothing
more than disable the messenger service. Disabling the messenger
service, by itself, is a "head in the sand" approach to computer
security. The real problem is _not_ the messenger service pop-ups;
they're actually providing a useful, if annoying, service by acting as
a security alert. The true problem is the unsecured computer, and
you've been advised to merely turn off the warnings. How is this
helpful?

2) For regular Internet pop-ups, you might try the free 12Ghosts
Popup-killer from http://12ghosts.com/ghosts/popup.htm, Pop-Up Stopper
from http://www.panicware.com/, or the Google Toolbar from
http://toolbar.google.com/, which is what I use.

3) To deal with pop-ups caused by any sort of "adware" and/or
"spyware,"such as Gator, Comet Cursors, Xupiter, Bonzai Buddy, or
KaZaA, and their remnants, that you've deliberately (but without
understanding the consequences) installed, two products that are
quite effective (at finding and removing this type of scumware) are
Ad-Aware from www.lavasoft.de and SpyBot Search & Destroy from
www.safer-networking.org/. Both have free versions. It's even
possible to use SpyBot Search & Destroy to "immunize" your system
against most future intrusions. I use both and generally perform
manual scans every week or so to clean out cookies, etc.


Bruce Chambers
--
Help us help you:



You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on
having both at once. - RAH
 
In (e-mail address removed)
Thanks for the help !


You're welcome. Glad to help.

--
Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User
Please reply to the newsgroup

 
Jack said:
There are a number of tools designed to prevent popups including the
freebie's that come with toolbar downloads. The better ones of course
cost money ;)
A common misconception. Some of the free ones work as well or better than
some of the paid ones. Try Popup Manager from
http://www.endpopups.com/index.html for instance.
 

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