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December 04, 2006 12:00 AM

Opinion: Microsoft's Revised WGA Version Still Annoying, Unfriendly to Users

Windows IT Pro
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Microsoft's reviled Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) program got a face-lift last week, and the company rolled out a new version of the antipiracy program to users via Automatic Updates. The new version of WGA provides more information to users who have a copy of Windows that WGA suspects is pirated, and features a new "indeterminate" mode, in which the program determines that a copy of Windows is possibly--but not definitely--pirated.

Yep, it's all about the user experience, folks. Although one might give Microsoft credit for switching from the previous system--in which WGA determined that Windows was either genuine or not, with no middle ground--the new system really serves only to highlight that the WGA tools often have no clue whether a copy of Windows is illegitimate. In the indeterminate mode, WGA will provide users with tools to help establish the legitimacy of their system, putting the onus of proof on the user instead of on Microsoft. It's unclear whether this is the type of benefit users were asking for from Microsoft's Genuine Advantage program.

Also, many users will take exception to Microsoft's continued practice of shipping WGA to users via Automatic Updates, a tool that's specifically designed for delivering critical security updates--not spyware, which the previous WGA version was proven to be. However, Microsoft said it promised to update WGA "every three or four months," and this update satisfies that promise.

In an interview with "InformationWeek", analyst Michael Cherry suggested that the new WGA version really just provides Microsoft with a way to avoid the numerous support calls caused by the earlier buggy versions of WGA, which often flagged systems as false positives--legitimate systems that WGA deemed pirated. Cherry said that now, instead of being "annoyed and mad when they call," Microsoft customers can "be sent off on a whole day adventure to troubleshoot validation for Microsoft." Sounds like a win-win.

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Comments
  • Will
    6 years ago
    Dec 06, 2006

    I do hates me some quicktime. The only reason it exists is b/c Apple wanted a crappy player to wrap around the .mov encoding scheme.

    "Apple Software Update: There is an update for your quicktime application! 40.1MB" Screw you!

  • Mark
    6 years ago
    Dec 06, 2006

    And here's an exploit that is not OS X, but Quicktime...

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2067683,00.asp?kc=EWNAVEMNL120506EOAD

    --tayme

  • Joe
    6 years ago
    Dec 05, 2006

    BTW bonch: learn to post links. There's no space in between them, and the mspx at the end gets broken in two.

    Also:

    "Microsoft announces a new zero-day exploit in all versions of Microsoft Word"

    WRONG! Notice there is no Word 2007 listed there.

    Sorry to rain on your parade.

  • Joe
    6 years ago
    Dec 05, 2006

    What a ****!

    Funny, but that has the same solution as several Mac OSX exploits that you're always so keen to point out:

    "Do not open attachments from unsolicited sources"

    Here's a good one for you bonch - 3 OSX vulnerabilities discovered in the last week:

    http://secunia.com/advisories/23178/

    http://secunia.com/advisories/23159/

    http://secunia.com/advisories/23120/

    Hmm...when was the last vulnerability found for Windows XP? Almost 3 weeks ago!!

    Notice that second one is yet another reason your neighbour friend shouldn't use an AirPort Extreme, stick!

  • Preston
    6 years ago
    Dec 05, 2006

    Let's hear it for Microsoft engineering--Microsoft announces a new zero-day exploit in all versions of Microsoft Word that allows for arbitrary code execution:

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,2068786,00.asphttp://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/advisory/929433.m
    spx

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