By
Joris Evers
Wednesday, June 28 2006 10:58 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39371036,00.htm
Microsoft released a new version of Windows Genuine Advantage
Notifications on Tuesday and detailed how to remove the controversial antipiracy
software.
The updated WGA
Notifications package includes changes that respond to criticism Microsoft
has faced over the software, the company said. It no longer checks in with
Microsoft after each restart, for example.
"Our customers have told us that they were disappointed with their WGA
Notifications experience, and we have made an effort to improve that with this
update," a Microsoft representative said in an e-mail interview.
WGA Notifications displays alerts on systems running a pirated copy of
Windows and includes a separate tool called WGA Validation that runs a piracy
check.
Microsoft has faced a lot of heat over WGA Notifications--in particular,
because it delivered a prerelease version of the tool alongside security fixes,
perhaps turning
Windows users into unsuspecting guinea pigs. Also, WGA Notifications was
found to ping
a Microsoft server after each system restart, a behavior the company did not
disclose.
While Microsoft is responding to some of the criticism, it said it will
continue to distribute WGA Notifications via the Automatic Updates feature in
Windows as a "high priority" update, even though it is not a security update.
Some critics had argued that Microsoft should find another way to distribute the
tool. Automatic Updates is a service intended to keep users secure by delivering
software updates and drivers that help protect against the latest publicly known
security threats and reliability issues.
"By using Automatic Updates, Microsoft is able to reach the greatest number
of PC users," a representative of th software company said. "Microsoft believes
it has a right to know whether systems using a service intended for licensed
customers are in fact licensed systems."
Removing alert tool
For the first time, though, Microsoft is
offering guidelines on how to remove WGA Notifications. Previously, it had said
the software could not be uninstalled, leading others to develop
numerous cracks and homegrown patches to counter the tool.
WGA Notifications still can't be removed using the Windows "Add or Remove
Programs" feature. Installing the new version will automatically remove the
older version of the software.
But for those who don't want the new release, Microsoft now provides
step-by-step removal instructions for the old version in a support article on its Web site. It said those instructions
will also work to uninstall the updated release of the antipiracy tool, but it
said it doesn't sanction that use--if you try to remove the latest version and
mess up, you're on your own.
"We have heard from customers that some wish to remove the software," the
company representative said. "Anyone who uninstalls...WGA Notifications will
still have the new release offered to them via Automatic Updates or Windows
Update. Uninstalling the newest version using these instructions is not tested,
supported or recommended."
Installation of WGA Notifications remains optional, though that might change
in the future, the Microsoft representative said.
The update ends the trial period for WGA Notifications. Microsoft will now
start pushing it to users worldwide. All users of English, Spanish, French,
German, Italian, Dutch and Brazilian Portuguese language versions of Windows XP
will soon be offered the updated software, Microsoft said. While WGA
Notifications won't "call home" to Microsoft, WGA Validation still periodically
checks in with Microsoft, the software maker said.
Windows Genuine Advantage is a stepped-up effort by Microsoft to boost the
number of Windows users who actually pay for the operating system. The company
has said that roughly a third of Windows copies worldwide have not been acquired
legitimately--as a boxed product or bundled onto a machine, for example.
Microsoft has gradually
expanded its pirate-busting efforts. At the moment, Windows users must have
their PC electronically approved before they can download add-on Microsoft
software such as Windows Media Player and Windows Defender. When the antipiracy
program started, validation was optional for downloads.
Counterfeit software hurts users and businesses, Microsoft has said. It also
contends that pirated versions of Windows sometimes include malicious software
and that sellers of legitimate copies of Windows can't compete with the low
prices offered by pirates.