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Microsoft Installs New Software Without Permission

Posted by kdawson on Thu Sep 13, 2007 08:20 AM
from the slipperiest-of-slopes dept.
Futurepower(R) writes "Even though I have Automatic Updates turned off, on August 28, 2007, between 3:49 and 3:51 AM PDT, Microsoft installed new files on my Windows XP computer." Nine files are updated on Vista and on XP SP1, a different set of on each, relating to Windows Update itself. Microsoft-watch.com's Joe Wilcox and ZDnet's Adrian Kingsley-Hughes confirm the stealth update.
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  • Block it (Score:4, Informative)

    by Ragein (901507) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:23AM (#20586603)
    Block M$ from having an interwebs connection and update from windiz, works even if they decided to ignore your settings.
    • Why? Re:Block it (Score:5, Insightful)

      by lecithin (745575) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:29AM (#20586677)
      Why should you have to?
      • by Applekid (993327) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:55AM (#20587115)

        Why should you have to?
        If Microsoft has the ability to forcefully modify code running on your property without your consent, I'd call that a threat.

        We have a right (and I'd say responsibility) to protect ourselves from threats.
        • by The Rizz (1319) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:48AM (#20588065)
          I say we take off and nuke the website from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
        • by pabrown85 (1128059) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:59AM (#20588177)
          Read your EULAs. It's your box, but it's their property running it.
            • Hang on a minute... (Score:5, Informative)

              by Anonymous Brave Guy (457657) on Thursday September 13 2007, @11:58AM (#20590375)

              Sorry for replying to my own post, but further reading suggests this isn't nearly as bad as TFSummary makes out. If you follow the links to the stories on the other sites, and read the comments and links given there, a lot of people are suggesting that this is only updating Windows Update files when you visit the Windows Update site, and not in fact a push of arbitrary changes at all. There's so much hype and FUD flying around this discussion that it's hard to see the wood for the trees.

        • by ChrisA90278 (905188) on Thursday September 13 2007, @10:30AM (#20588721)
          "If Microsoft has the ability to forcefully modify code running on your property without your consent, I'd call that a threat."

          Did you read you EULA? The copy of Windows Vista you have is NOT your property. It belongs to Microsoft and they are just granting you a license to use it. Are you sure you did not give oncent? Maybe read it again.

          What I can beleive is who many people agree with these license terms. If just 1% refused and returnd the product for a re-fund the terms would change. Consummers are stupid.
          • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 13 2007, @10:16AM (#20588455)
            If Microsoft can run code on your box, I'd expect some other people can too. l33t crackers, the government. What would stop them?

            The law? Oh wait...

            -Alberto Gonzalez
        • Re:Why? Re:Block it (Score:5, Interesting)

          by mulvane (692631) on Thursday September 13 2007, @11:39AM (#20590017)
          If automatic updates is turned off, and the service is disabled, just how did MS know to send an update to the machine in the first place?
          • Re:Why? Re:Block it (Score:5, Informative)

            by Nomaxxx (1136289) on Thursday September 13 2007, @12:24PM (#20590789) Homepage

            If automatic updates is turned off, and the service is disabled, just how did MS know to send an update to the machine in the first place?
            The trick is that in Windows XP, even if "Automatic Updates" are turned off, the "windows update" service is still launched at startup. You have to manually disable it in msconfig.
  • Hmm.... (Score:5, Funny)

    by TechnoBunny (991156) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:24AM (#20586613)
    ...I cant see how anyone on /. would ever object.

    Anyone want popcorn?
    • /.er:Windows is insecure, Microsoft is evil.

      /.er:Where are my patches?

      /.er:You're evil because you patched my system.

      MS:O.k., we'll make a system the user can run and patch them system that way.

      /.er:You're evil because most lusers won't set it up properly and the net will be taken over by these luser's machines.

      MS:O.k, we'll patch the system involuntarily.

      /.er:You're evil for patching my system that way.

      MS: You've made a career at being happy with whatever prevails, right?

      • by pla (258480) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:44AM (#20587997) Journal
        MS:O.k, we'll patch the system involuntarily.

        "...But not anything that might actually affect security, only those features relating to disabling machines we consider invalidly licensed. Because we never make mistakes regarding licensing issues."

        Yeah, I most certainly do take issue with them patching a system against the owner's wishes. After the owner has explicitly disabled autoupdating, I would go so far as to call that "criminal trespass". And doing so in a way that neither fixes nor improves the security of a machine... Not justifiable in any context.
        • by Kadin2048 (468275) * <slashdot@kadin.xoxy@net> on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:21AM (#20587617) Homepage Journal

          Deal with it, you're pissed at MS for being the top dog. Then you've looked around for the low hanging fruit, that exists for all projects, for your justifications.
          No, I dislike Microsoft for two major reasons: one is that they promote and maintain a monoculture, and actively try to make that monoculture incompatible with anything else. Windows would be a lot more acceptable, if it played nice and interoperated with other systems based on established standards. I'm more than happy to let everyone choose whatever OS they want, based on their needs and what fits them best, but "the Microsoft way" works directly against that: their use of proprietary, incompatible, or just plain broken 'standards' forces many people who would be best suited with a different OS to use Windows, and that's a net loss for everyone.

          On a more personal level, I dislike most Microsoft products (with certain notable exceptions), because I think they have a corporate culture that promotes mediocrity and "good enough"-ness. As someone who has always labored to pursue quality and technical correctness as an end in itself, I find the inherent laziness in their products offensive. I understand this is a personal decision; looking at other product arenas, the mass market is usually filled with garbage. This is fine, and consumers should have a choice as to what they want to buy. However, I detest Microsoft for virtually eliminating the consumer's ability to buy better.

          Also, they have an apparent contempt for both their competitors, which is understandable if unwarranted, and their customers, which is unacceptable.

          I don't hate Microsoft for being on top. I hate them for being on top, while pushing an inferior product than the market would produce in their absence, on all of us.
          • by Blakey Rat (99501) on Thursday September 13 2007, @10:16AM (#20588459)
            I would just like to point out that he could, in fact, have been more wrong. He could have stated, for instance, that Microsoft is run by dolphins from an secret underwater base in the artic.
            • by thegnu (557446) <thegnuNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday September 13 2007, @10:01AM (#20588219) Homepage Journal
              Except for the whole anticompetitive practices thing. Exploiting people who are uneducated in a field is unethical. For people who are educated in the field, they may contest the people who don't conduct themselves ethically.

              There is a LOT of vendor lock-in for MS Windows, and it's in large part because of their unfair practices, and the free pass they got from the government for disseminating American software on all the world's computers.
  • Under cygwin, you can type:

    strings /cygdrive/c/windows/system32/wuapi.dll | grep 7\.0\.6

    If you get back something like:


    7.0.6000.381
    7.0.6000.381 (winmain(wmbla).070730-1740)
    7.0.6000.381


    then Microsoft has secretly updated you.
  • And? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by FoolsGold (1139759) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:27AM (#20586643)
    I'm pretty sure the EULA states somewhere MS can do this. You agree to it when clicking that little checkbox for accepting the license when installing the damn OS.
  • by frovingslosh (582462) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:27AM (#20586645)
    It would be nice to know the IP address that is being contacted here. With that, automatic update could be turned off at the router/firewall. If you trust Microsoft you always get punished.
          • by Niten (201835) on Thursday September 13 2007, @10:06AM (#20588289) Homepage

            This isn't directed entirely at you, but I do find these "I don't trust Windows Update" type comments quite ridiculous. So you trust Microsoft to write your computer's entire operating system, but you're afraid that a patch might contain something nefarious? Granted, software updates may accidentally break things from time to time (this is true on OS X and even Linux as well as on Windows), but if your concern is that Microsoft may try to install something "evil" on your computer - too late, you're already running their closed-source operating system; the damage, if any, is done.

            If you're that concerned about it, install BSD or Linux instead. In any event, do everyone a favor and keep up with the latest security updates on whichever operating system you run.

            I had a roommate once who refused to install Microsoft's Windows 2000 patches on his laptop, right up until my NIDS discovered his computer attempting to propagate the Zotob worm. Oops. He installs software updates now.

  • Dear god. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Brian Lewis (1011579) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:27AM (#20586651) Homepage
    Is it me or does this just seem down right nasty?

    If a person who uses vista or xp did not want any updates to their OS, they turn off Automatic updates. It's their choice. Where does Microsoft get off thinking that something like this is acceptable?

    If I ran either of those operating systems, I would probably file a lawsuit, as to me that is a huge invasion of privacy. If they can force you to update those few files, they can absolutely view any and every file on your computer.

    Although, this should come as no surprise...
    • Re:Dear god. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by The Cisco Kid (31490) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:36AM (#20586787)
      No, its not their choice. Once you choose Microsoft, their terms allow them to choose anything and everything else that Bill Gates & company want to chose for you.

      The only choice is to either use Microsoft products, or not to. One leaves someone else in control of your system, another retains control for you.

      Anyone who is shocked or surprised by this just hasnt been paying attention for the last ten years or so.
  • by quantum bit (225091) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:29AM (#20586679) Journal
    I wonder if this still happens even if you have set the Automatic Updates service to 'Disabled' in services, rather than using the control panel applet which tells it not to update but still leaves the service running.

    Probably a good idea to disable the BITS service too.
      • by dc29A (636871) * on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:43AM (#20586909) Homepage
        I tried something like that with WMI when MOM agent (or was it SMS agent, can't recall) was eating up way too much CPU. I disabled WMI service. Reboot the machine, to my shock, WMI service was started despite being disabled. If MOM or SMS can do that, I am sure Windows Update could force start BITS even if it's disabled.
  • by loki.jf (1156263) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:30AM (#20586695)
    Can they pull? Interesting question to ask I think.
  • by skyggen (888902) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:30AM (#20586701)
    license? Do you own your copy of windows? No. You are only licensed to use it under their terms. Do you own M$ Office? No. You are only licensed to use it. If Microsoft wants to change their files on your computer they can. Also read carefully because some licenses of Microsoft actually claim that were you to so much as add any hardware you no longer are licensed and your windows copy will be in validated. I use linux, I don't have these problems. It has never been that Linux was a superior operating system. I mean for the longest time I had to deal with so much shit to to listen to an mp3. BUT the one thing about Linux is Your copy is Your copy to share and to see everythijg it does. Using linux was the first time I could take my Foil Hat off in years.
      • by caseih (160668) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:03AM (#20587249)
        Not quite. Almost all distros of linux have *no* EULA. The license" you refer to (licenses, actually) govern redistribution. Because of said redistribution rights, the moment you receive Linux from someone exercising those rights you can now do whatever you want with linux. The moment you choose to distribute it to someone else, the license comes into effect.

        This is generally very different from the "licensing" you talk about with Windows. In fact, even though it is all based on the same copyright law, these are, for the user, very different things.

        I do in fact own Linux as much as copyright law allows. Something that the Windows EULA never allows.
      • by Karellen (104380) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:27AM (#20587733) Homepage
        Rubbish.

        It's just as accurate to say you own a copy of Linux as it is to say you own a copy of a book.

        In neither case do you own the copyright for the item in question, but you do own the copy you have.

        You own books, don't you?
  • by pieaholicx (1148705) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:33AM (#20586721) Homepage
    Does this mean that somewhere hidden deep in the API is the ability to automatically download and install files without user consent? Does this mean that somebody else could use that exact API to do something a bit less friendly? Does anybody else feel a whole new batch of windows security alerts?
  • by Mark_in_Brazil (537925) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:34AM (#20586735)
    TFAs only mention XP and Vista, but I have Windows 2000 (it will be the last Windows I ever own, and I'm just keeping it running until my end-of-year trip to the USA, when I'll buy a Macbook) and was surprised when I woke up one day this week (either the 11th or 12th of September) and found my computer showing the "got restarted and waiting for somebody to log in" screen. Before I had a UPS, that happened now and then, but since getting a UPS, that shouldn't happen unless we get a major power failure that lasts longer than the several minutes my UPS's battery gives me. That hasn't happened since I got my UPS, and I noticed that other things around the house showed no signs of power loss, despite my computer having been restarted.
    When I logged in, Windows Update informed me that it had installed updates. That's hard to understand, since I've had Windows Update configured for a long time now to ask me before installing anything. When I saw the item on /., I thought I might have discovered what happens, but TFAs only talk about XP and Vista.

    So was what happened to my computer (running Win2K) the same thing? Did others with old versions of Windows have the same experience?
  • by Sqweegee (968985) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:36AM (#20586771)
    I'm really surprised that they think so little of us that they didn't at least bother to write up a canned statement about the update. Didn't they expect anyone to notice the patching? Many people take others messing with their PCs very seriously, be it micro$oft or some script kiddie out there, and track this kind of thing constantly.

    Any word on what the purpose of the patching is?
  • omg hackers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by deftcoder (1090261) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:38AM (#20586819)
    Why hasn't someone diff'd the files that were updated and dived into the disassembly and checked to see what was actually changed?

    Would be more informative than bitching about it...
  • Policy violation (Score:5, Interesting)

    by NullProg (70833) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:53AM (#20587077) Homepage Journal
    Doesn't this violate every corporate network policy on the planet? What about the defense department?
    What if the one of the computers was monitoring a critical system and the stealth upgrade crashed the system?

    Isn't this a violation of Sarbanes-Oxley computer auditing requirements?

    Food for thought.
    Enjoy,
    • by musikit (716987) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:31AM (#20586705)
      because a large majority of people dont patch windows and i need to test my software with the least common demoninator to ensure it works on all systems
      • by Pojut (1027544) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:37AM (#20586799) Homepage
        OK, so have a "test box". I myself have one. Guess what cable never get's plugged into it? That's right, the ethernet cable. If I'm doing something that requires the use of my in-house LAN, guess what gets unplugged....that's right, my connection to the outside world.

        It's not that difficult really...I find that having an isolated not-connected (not even to my internal network) windows 98 box is FANTASTIC for my older games...fuck DosBox, I'll just build a 200 dollar killer Win98 box.
    • by HangingChad (677530) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:45AM (#20586945) Homepage

      Those are exactly the kinds of things you agree to with EULA's, and it's not just Microsoft. Software licenses get more bizarre and dickish by the day.

      • by rucs_hack (784150) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:34AM (#20586747)
        *sigh* nice troll. 4/10

        Hmm, care to prove me wrong? How many open source projects enforce monitoring or hidden updates about which there is no choice on users?
          • by Dolda2000 (759023) <fredrik@dolda2000 . c om> on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:45AM (#20586955) Homepage

            Ubuntu installs the package "popularity-contest" by default, which reports every package you're using and how often. That's large scale stealth spying, but it's not proprietary so it should be ok...
            Yeah, it is installed by default, but during the installation procedure you do get the question of whether you actually want to enable it. It is worth noting that it defaults to "no" if you just click past it.
    • by El Lobo (994537) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:39AM (#20586833)
      What is really sad is that everybody here blindly trust this "article" without really checking and re-checking other sources. That's the scary thing these days.
        • by B'Trey (111263) on Thursday September 13 2007, @08:59AM (#20587185)
          That's a fine setting for a home system. It's asking for trouble in a corporate environment, particularly one where you run custom applications or services. If this [com.com] happens on your home computer, it's largely an issue of annoyance and inconvenience. If it happens to large numbers of computers in an enterprise, it may mean losses of millions of dollars. Most enterprises test patches on lab machines to identify issues before they deploy them. MS (or Ubuntu or Apple or whomever) has no business patching anyone's machine without permission. Period.
        • by Red_Foreman (877991) * on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:00AM (#20587197)
          No, whats really scary is just how common it is for blind-MS hate and Linux fanboi-ism to cause people who should know better to do things like run with Windows Update turned off.

          Many companies will not install patches - even the automatic Windows Update ones - until they have a chance to test it themselves and make sire that the patch doesn't inadvertently break mission critical applications.

          Sometimes, even with known issues, the devil you know is better than the devil you don't...

          I happen to like the fact that all three OS's I use (Ubuntu, OSX and Windows) patch themselves automatically for critical updates. I don't get butthurt about any of the three keeping themselves updated.

          Wait until you get a call at 4:30 AM from an irate boss complaining that [Killer App A] is no longer working because a patch overwrote a DLL and it's now *your* problem.

          If Automatic Update works for you - that's great for you. But for a lot of companies, automatic updates is like playing Russian roulette with a Glock 9mm...
        • by confused one (671304) on Thursday September 13 2007, @09:03AM (#20587255)
          I patch the boxes myself. I do it regularly. I CAN NOT have Microsoft patch them automatically because I run long duration tests that CAN NOT be interrupted by an update or a reboot.
        • My hardware and software firewalled Windows XP SP2 computer was updated, and Automatic Updates is turned off. This is the list copied from the Event Viewer:

          Information 8/27/2007 3:54:58 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:54:23 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:54:17 PM NtServicePack None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:54:10 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:54:05 PM NtServicePack None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:53:57 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:53:49 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:53:47 PM Service Control Manager None 7036 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:53:47 PM Service Control Manager None 7035 SYSTEM MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:53:44 PM WindowsMedia None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:50 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:45 PM NtServicePack None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:26 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:21 PM NtServicePack None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:15 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:10 PM NtServicePack None 4377 MichaelJ MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:51:02 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          Information 8/27/2007 3:49:19 PM Windows Update Agent Installation 19 N/A MT
          (I submitted the Slashdot story, and mistakenly said the time was AM.)

          This was definitely without my permission, and raises the question about who has control over my computer, me or Microsoft. If Microsoft can put files on my computer without my knowledge, then it is really Microsoft's computer, which is control that I find extremely objectionable.