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BoxerJoe

03/31/09 2:11 AM

#11094 RE: solarstock #11093

Grey McKenzie (founder of Ligatt's newest acquisition):

"He is also the Founder of www.nationalcybersecurity.com a private venture where he consults & shares ideas with security leaders nationwide regarding the improvement of our National Cyber Security.
His software is in use by the FBI, CIA, State & Local Law Enforcement nationwide, including Corporate & home users. His customer base is worldwide and he has dedicated himself to helping his clients protect their homes & offices from all types of Cyber Security Threats.

Grey & his team are the worlds leading experts in covert commercially available surveillance software.

He is a firm believer that it is not the governments responsibility to protect us, but that it is the other way around

He has been quoted saying, "We must protect ourselves, our government, and our way of life. If we don't, we may lose the privilege of passing these rights on to our children & grandchildren."
Mr McKenzie is available for speaking engagements & private consultations

He & his team are constantly in tune with the latest Cyber Criminal activities, one of their focuses is teaching companies & consumers how to avoid them.

Grey has been a guest on many of the top radio talk shows nationwide and his software has been featured in books & magazines since 2001.
One of his favorite pastimes is helping business owners take their companies to the next level by harnessing the power of the media."
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solarstock

03/31/09 2:13 AM

#11095 RE: solarstock #11093

Not a very warm review of spycop

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,1650571,00.asp

SpyCop's interface is simple, but its design is far from user-friendly. Scan results in particular leave a lot to be desired. They appear in two small, fixed-size list boxes and provide little information to help you decide how to proceed. All SpyCop shows is a filename; double-clicking brings up a dialog with a button that promises more information but simply launches a Google search—which seems a bit slapdash, given the app's price.

If you opt to remove a file, SpyCop does so by renaming it with a .spy extension (VeryBadThing.dll becomes VeryBadThing .dll.spy). The tool has no built-in rollback feature, though you could manually restore the file's original extension by removing the .spy.

SpyCop offers a free-evaluation version, but this scans only for a random subset of spyware. If you need a tool specifically to detect and remove key loggers, SpyCop may be for you. For more general antispyware solutions, other products in this roundup offer more balanced feature sets and cost less.


SpyCop v6

Downloads Count: 34,364

License Type: Trial

Price: $50

Date Added: Jan 22, 2005

Operating Systems: Windows 2000, Windows 9.x, Windows Me, Windows XP

File Size: 1320 KB

Author: SpyCop

http://www.pcworld.com/downloads/userreviews/fid,21620/userreviews.html