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8151
Living Room / Re: England Is Grinding To A Halt.
« Last post by Renegade on March 10, 2011, 02:13 AM »
Tax is ok when it is spent responsibly.

But has anyone ever heard of a government, real or fictional, that actually spends money responsibly?
8152
Developer's Corner / Re: Automatic Updater
« Last post by Renegade on March 10, 2011, 02:11 AM »
AutoUpdater, Open Candy... a sure recipe to stay away from your software.


I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant. I will not rant.


What do you know about OpenCandy? I mean that you actually have first hand knowledge of, and not from [10] some third party that read an article based on a forum post about a blog post from someone who heard about GOTO 10.

I suppose that you've uninstalled:

  • Windows
  • Linux
  • Adobe Acrobat
  • Sun Java
  • Firefox
  • iTunes
  • etc.
  • etc.
  • etc.

There's nothing nefarious about an autoupdater. You poll to see if there's a new version available, then let the user decide if they want to update.

Updates are for my software only. Not for anything else.

Jeez...

Like I said in another post, the thing I hate in this business is that anytime you want to get paid for your work, people come out of the woodwork lambasting you wanting to make a living.


Hm, sounds just like... DcUpdater :-[

And it also looks like a solution looking for a problem :huh:


Actually, it's much different.

I can't see any problems though. It's pretty simple. Check if a new version is available. Update if needed.

8153
Developer's Corner / Automatic Updater
« Last post by Renegade on March 10, 2011, 12:30 AM »
I was looking for an automatic updater, and found this:

http://wyday.com/wyupdate/

It seems pretty good. I've tested it out some and it was good enough that I bought a license. ($70 vs. $250) Nice to save a few bucks there as I already spend WAAAAYYY too much on software as it is.

Anyways, thought that might be interesting for some people.

Oh, and there's a free version with BSD licensed source code as well.
8154
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 09, 2011, 11:44 PM »
@Renegade - ok, I think I'm following so far.

Few more questions (there will probably be more later):

0. I have been told that prior to doing any sort of opt-in or opt-out, OC scans the user's drive and sends back information to...someplace...and modifies the users registry without any notification or option to prevent it. This operation is automatic, unstoppable, and runs completely invisibly. Is this true?


No. It is not completely true.

The license screen is displayed prior.

Checking, and the DLL "OpenCandy_{57E292A3-7C15-41F2-AD55-F8AADEA415B7}.dll" (some GUID in there) runs from User/NAME/AppData/Local/OpenCandy/OpenCandy_{GUID}.dll.

I'd need to look into it some more. It uses Amazon storage though.


The installer IS the user interface. It IS the front facing interaction. There's no reason to display more than that. That would only complicate things further.



1. Why doesn't OpenCandy make it's presence known during the installation like the Ask Toolbar or other (supposedly) "just like" apps do. Why not just call it what it is? It seems OC tries to cloak it's presence by burying itself in somebody else's installer and EULA. Why is that? Why don't they just run OC as an additional installer that tags along (like everybody else's does) if it isn't primarily motivated by a desire to make its presence and actions less noticeable? What good and purely technical reason(s) do they offer for doing it this way?


It's like going to the grocery store and having them ask you to make a donation to some cause, e.g. flood victims or whatever, at the register instead of having people ask you as you enter/leave -- it's more streamlined.

There's nothing masked or cloaked about it. The EULA is displayed. Nobody reads them. Who's fault is that? You can only do so much. Would you prefer that all software force you to click a checkbox for every sentence in the EULA? Of course not.

The way they have it set up is minimally intrusive and easy to work with. It's right up in front with nothing hidden at all.

I can't "see" air. So... God must be hiding something from me in the air. God is out to get me. God is in league with Satan...

Of course invisible processes are invisible. That's nothing new. In the *NIX world they are daemons, and in the Windows world, services. Software runs invisibly all the time. A lot of things just don't make any sense to have a UI for. That doesn't make them malicious.

If they did set it up like you mention there, people would complain because it's too intrusive running another installer.

There's no winning at all. It's damned if you do, damned if you don't, and damned for any reason whatsoever.

I blame all this on the SCAREWARE industry. They're some of the most irresponsible b******s out there. They've got everyone so brainwashed about "malware" and whatever that there's no escaping the tiniest scrutiny.

Some software writes to its program files folder. Does that make it evil?

There's just no good reason to make a simple installation all complicated and to require the user to confirm every little thing. Most people wouldn't know what any of it was anyways!


2. The author of DarkWave Studio uses OC, and says he has set it to default to opt-out. Do you control whether it is set up to follow an opt-in or opt-out methodology? DWS's author seemed to infer it was his choice which way to go. How does his statement square with your statement there is no opt-in or out per se?


I have not seen any opt-in/out options. Maybe those are some of the changes in the SDK.


3. Is there anyplace where you are given the opportunity to remove all traces of OC regardless of where (registry, etc) they are located without having to manually dig it out? Do they publish a utility to do that? And do they advertise such a utility is available and make it easy to get if they do? If not - why not?


Lots of programs leave traces. It's not the end of the world.

A file can't delete itself without a reboot. I've not checked that as I hate rebooting. (I'll check when I do reboot though.)

As far as I can see so far, there's nothing nefarious going on at all.


4. Why do they store their stuff in the registry? Is there a demonstrably valid technical reason for doing it that way as opposed to putting it in some sort of cache file elsewhere on the drive?


Like I said before, I didn't find any registry traces.


5. You object to calling OC adware. But then you say it presents "offers." How is an "offer" to consider buying something different than an "ad" which also asks you to consider buying something? Forgive me if I sound obtuse. But I suspect I may be a little 'colorblind' in that end of the spectrum. What in the name of the Purple Buddah is the difference between an ad and an offer?


Ahem... Which is why I used 20pt. Apparently I need to do it again... Perhaps 36pt is better. In red. :D (Muahahahaha~! :P )


ADWARE got a bad name (and rightfully so) because software would install other software (the actual adware program)that would pop up ads at any time -- the installed software's sole purpose was to pop up ads on the desktop. OpenCandy does not do that at all.


You're confusing ads with "adware". (Thanks to the SCAREWARE industry that does nothing but sow FUD.)

I go to find an answer to a question I have in a search engine. There are ads there. Is the search engine "adware"?

I click through a link to a site to find my answer. They have ads there. Is the website "adware"?

The search engine and website both put cookies on my computer and track me. Are they "adware" or "malware"?

Is TV 'adware'?

I drive down the road and there's a billboard ADvertising something. Does that make the roads "ADWARE"?

I buy a shirt that has the manufacturer logo on it. Does that make the shirt "ADWARE"?

I wear the shirt. With the ad on it. Does that make ME "ADWARE"?

A book I buy has the publisher name, logo, and other information about the publisher in it, which is all entirely irrelevant to the content of the book that I paid for. Does that make the book "ADWARE"?

I go to the movies and there are previews. Are movies "ADWARE"?

There is no end to it.

I put that horrible 20/36pt font there for a reason. ;)

There is a very big difference between "adware" and "advertising supported".

OpenCandy provides a way for software vendors to "advertise" their software by paying other software vendors to display their "ad" or "offer" one time during the installation of that 2nd vendor's software. It does not pop up ads like adware.

When I first came to DC, I followed a link from inside of some weblogs to a review about ALZip.

https://www.donation...ndex.php?topic=896.0

I was clear in my disagreement with the inhouse graphic in the upper right not being adware:

License Type - It's freeware for home users while commercial users have an unlimited trial period, but are asked to purchase a license. It's most certainly NOT adware. None of the ALTools have any adware, no spyware, no junkware, no third party bundled wierdness - nada, zilch, zip :) I really don't want people to think that ALTools are adware. The info banner in the upper right only mentions ALTools and does not serve ads for any third parties. PLEASE - Would you kindly fix this. I really don't want anyone to get the impression that we're associated with that seedy underside of the Internet...

I still believe that.

As an analogy, why don't we hang soldiers for murder? They kill people. That's murder.

Adult topic (analogy)
While we're at it, why not throw all couples in prison for rape. At some point in a relationship partners have sex with the other when they don't really want to, but they do it for the other partner. So, are they willing or not? Why not just solve the problem and throw them all in prison?


The connotation for "adware" is so drastically negative that the 2 analogies above, while extreme, are actually accurate. "Adware" = "death sentence".

Advertising supported? That's ok. Lots of things are. There's nothing wrong with it, and nothing underhanded. (I'll not get into propaganda or what actually happens in mass media advertising as that's an entirely different can of worms, and I'd disagree with my previous sentence in that context.)




6. You seem to infer that you're comfortable with OC's business model and modus operandi. Are you comfortable enough with it that you'd be willing to accept personal responsibility for any software problems, privacy breaches, or security issues introduced on one of your user's machines if it was the direct result of something done by OC during it's normal operations? Not to say you should. But would you at least be willing?


No. I wouldn't. Nobody does. And that's in my EULA. It's a standard disclaimer in all software EULAs.



7. Does OC in any way indemnify you for any problems their software may cause your user's system? If you get sued by somebody because OC did something and you got blamed for it - does OC offer you any legal protections or warranties?


As #6. Standard EULAs all have those provisions.


8. Have you been allowed to examine the source code for their software - or gotten a chance to look behind the scenes and observe their backoffice operation in action? If not, why do you trust them like you do?


Have you seen the source code and gone through it all for your OS and all the programs you run? If not, why do you trust them like you do?

That's really way to far out of line. Companies keep internal processes internal for a reason -- they don't want someone to rip them off and steal their ideas. That's even more important for software companies that have only intellectual property (e.g. copyrights) as their only assets. Google is nothing more than a bunch of dead servers and office buildings without their IP.



I know these are a lot of questions. So don't feel rushed to get back. Sorry to be asking you all this. But you're apparently DC's resident expert on things OC -so You Da Man to ask.

 :)

:)

Like I said before:




:D

I think you're looking for things that aren't there.

8155
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 09, 2011, 09:36 PM »
Windows comes with a firewall, which is turned on by default. If you shut it off and then as a result get exploited with a worm, do you have a right to blame anyone but yourself?

I hate this argument. e.g.

Your house comes with a lock, which most people lock by default. If you unlock it and get robbed and murdered, do you have a right to blame anyone but yourself?

Well... First, yes. You do have a right. It's the robber/murderer (malware author) that is to blame.

Sigh... Second, no. You know you live in a bad neighborhood (the Internet), and you should have been more careful.

I don't think there's a right answer.
8156
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 09, 2011, 08:21 PM »
...helping them deploy their data harvesting client... 

That is not what it does. You are misinformed.

Ok. Fair enough. Nobody said I was infallible. Not even me.

(Also switched the wording on my post above to accommodate your objection.)

Now could you please explain it to me so I won't be "misinformed" any more? I'm always willing to listen and accept correction. But I'm also not much of a coder so please don't get annoyed if I ask a lot of dumb questions afterwards. Ok?:)

So...starting with the OC thingy itself - who decides how it gets installed? Is it the same in every situation (it's not according to Microsoft BTW) or does each developer get to decide how it will work from a group of ...dunno...options?...deals?...revenue programs?

And if it does, does the choice of options determine the amount OC pays the developer?


It's actually very simple.

1. Develop software.
2. Create installer.
3. Incorporate OpenCandy into installer.

That's pretty much done there.

So, what we have is an installer with the OpenCandy DLL in there (OCSetupHlp.dll).

What happens is that during the installation the OpenCandy DLL checks to see if there is any software in its offerings that is already installed. If it is, then it doesn't offer that software to the user. Why would it? They have it already~! So, instead it offers other software that might be interesting for them or maybe not. If it is, then the user can check a radio button to accept the offer, or check a radio box to decline the offer. This makes sense for the user, the developer, and OpenCandy.

IMPORTANT: Note here that those are both unchecked radio buttons. This forces a user decision. It is neither "opt-in" nor "opt-out" in the traditional sense of a checkbox.

I believe that is a fantastic way to balance the interests of both the developer and the user. The decision is ENTIRELY up to the user and they must proactively make that decision.

The checked/unchecked check box is a passive way to deal with the problem, and quite frankly, it's very poor. Unless you want the default action... In which case you're making the decision for the user. Not good.

So... back to what's happening.

Once the user decides, the installation proceeds as normal. A downloader dialog fetches their offer and once it's completed, the user must click a button to begin the installer. (A second action.)

That completes the process. The OCSetupHlp.dll file (from the original installer) is not left on the system as it has completed its purpose.

I installed some software with OpenCandy in it and I've checked my Registry. I have 14 occurances of OpenCandy and ALL of them are things that I created or are from the SDK. There are no OpenCandy registry entries from any software. There are 0 occurances of 'OCSetupHlp'.




So...starting with the OC thingy itself - who decides how it gets installed? Is it the same in every situation (it's not according to Microsoft BTW) or does each developer get to decide how it will work from a group of ...dunno...options?...deals?...revenue programs?

And if it does, does the choice of options determine the amount OC pays the developer?

It doesn't get installed. That's simply not true. It "runs". There's a difference. As above, it runs during the installation of the developer's software.

The DLL has no options. Integrating it into an installer is very straight forward and simple. I had a few hiccups, but they were entirely due to me not being an Inno Setup guru. (It took me a bit to locate a few things in Inno Setup, but once I did, it was smooth sailing.)

The ONLY things that you customize are things that are specific to your own software, e.g. name of the program, your program key from OpenCandy, and your program secret key from OpenCandy. (They track that information, which lets you get paid.)

They also track basic, non-personal information like operating systems. e.g. How many Win XP, Vista and Windows 7 boxes? Technical specs in aggregate form are important for OpenCandy and developers, but are in no way violating any kind of privacy. Anyone that would complain about this is simply complaining for the sake of complaining. 

Remember, OpenCandy's job is to maximize the amount of revenue that they earn from the offers they have available. They pay developers a portion of that revenue, so it's in the developer's best interests to have higher paying software offers through their installers.

But the developer has no control over that. It's the developer's job to go out and get "customers" into the shop. It's OpenCandy's job to offer an "upsell" to the customer, who is free to choose to accept or decline the offer.

Incidentally, but very much related, I've also been speaking with a competitor to OpenCandy in the same business. I mentioned OpenCandy's problems and the person I was talking to said that it was unfortunate for them. Judging from what he said and how he said it, it sounded like he empathized with them and understood OpenCandy's problems, and that he understood that those problems were not really justified or the fault of OpenCandy. But that was just my reading of what and how he said it.


P.S. No need to shout or get super creative with the font attributes. We're all listening to you even if we won't always agree. This is DC. We can be passionate about something without getting pissed off about it.

Sorry. That wasn't my intent, and I wasn't angry. I meant that for emphasis to point out the origin of adware as it is very different from what we're talking about here. I didn't want it to get lost in the 'noise' of my lengthy ramblings. :)


8157
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 09, 2011, 06:08 PM »
...helping them deploy their data harvesting client... 

That is not what it does. You are misinformed.
8158
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 09, 2011, 06:06 PM »
Just out of curiosity: are you going to state right up front on your download and product info pages that it contains OpenCandy, identify it as an adware application, and say that if you don't want to install it you'll need to explicitly tell it not to? and that tracking software may remain on their machine even if they later "uninstall" it.


This is one of the things I hate about trying to make a living in software. The moment you try something on the desktop, no matter how above board you are, people dump on you for getting into bed with the Devil and spawning the Antichrist. Sigh...

Mind you, people seems to be perfectly fine with serving ads in mobile applications and web applications. All animals are created equal, but some are more equal than others...

No. I'm most certainly NOT going to identify it as adware because it isn't adware. The installer displays offers that people can accept or reject.

Adware got a bad name (and rightfully so) because software would install other software (the actual adware program)that would pop up ads at any time -- the installed software's sole purpose was to pop up ads on the desktop. OpenCandy does not do that at all.

It's kind of like accusing the Pope of being in the KKK because he's got a big pointy white hat.

There is no tracking software installed either.

OpenCandy scans for previously installed versions of software that it has to offer. If it detects it, it doesn't offer it. Why would it? You already have it. That only makes sense. Being intelligent doesn't make you bad.


Or are you going to let them find out about it after they download and start installing like it seems everybody who is including it does?


Actually, no. See here:

Opening up software business for complete transparency

My plan is to open up as much as possible. I'm still thinking about how to do that, and what to make public, but for revenue methods I will be putting out explicit information about that.

I'm thinking about a short "How is this free" or "Why is this free" section on product pages with a longer entry in the FAQ, then links to http://cynic.me/ articles that go into extreme depth about EXACTLY what is going on.


I'm not trying to sound hostile. I've got nothing but respect for you. It's just everybody using OpenCandy seems to almost go out of their way to hide its presence as much as possible from what I've seen. Makes me wonder if there's something in OC's license or in some policy or recommendation that suggests or requires a 'stealth' approach.  :)


I never had ads on any of the sites I run/ran (excpet for a brief run at http://renegademinds.com/ on a few pages that I removed). I hate ads. But, putting food on the table and paying bills in more important than my loathing of ads.

I've checked into OpenCandy probably a lot deeper than most people here. I have not found anything suspicious or anything that would make me think that they are one of the bad guys.

I've emailed with them a fair bit and brought up the Windows Defender issue. (Speaking of...)



I'm not smart enough to know if OC is a threat or not.
That's why I have security programs that detect threats.

http://www.opencandy...soft-adware-debacle/

Is a poor attempt at some kind of explanation. IMO.
And minimizing their own problems.
Blaming MS Defender, well Nod32 found it too.
So it's not MS at fault, but OC's changes that got caught.
And now they back peddle.....

(Avast does not flag it.)

In an email I wrote:

After I’d filled out the contact form at the OpenCandy site, I downloaded the Publisher SDK and got a Windows Defender warning. (Screenshot attached.) I am not certain about whether this will be a problem going forward as it appears rather recent. The MS site has OpenCandy flagged only starting in February this year.
 
http://www.microsoft...&threatid=159633

I was in the middle of reading the CEO's blog post about that when he emailed me back with the link.

I said:

Thanks for the link. I’d already followed links from Andrew here:
 
https://www.donation....msg179472#msg179472
 
And was in the middle of reading it. :)
 
And I’ve been there as well with false positives… It’s frustrating in the extreme.

He wrote back:

Yeah, false positives suck. Particularly when it's a large company like MS that doesn't have any concrete way to rectify it. It also sucks when your largest advertising partner (Bing) is calling you adware. It's kooky.


NOW...

How many people here have been caught with a false positive? I have. It sucks. It's painful. It's extremely damaging because the security SCAREWARE industry has no vested interest in truth. They have a vested interest in peddling their products, and that means they have a vested interest in FEAR.

The missing EULA is entirely believable. It happens. Flagging the entire process as adware is extreme though. Should OC have caught it? Yes. Did they? Obviously not. But guess what? The new SDK has that check automatically built in to prevent that sort of thing in the future.

What does this sound like to me?



Just like that.


They are funded by (from their website http://www.opencandy.com/company/ ):

We’re backed by awesome investors like Google Ventures, Bessemer Venture Partners, O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, Reid Hoffman and Jordan Greenhall who have joined us on this mission to revitalize the software community.


I'm not going into this blind, but I'm not going to simply accept that OpenCandy is adware (which I would never put in any of my software) when there is zero evidence for it.


I will post back about it later though once I have everything deployed and have more information. I'll be posting (as mentioned above) to http://cynic.me/ with in-depth information about different aspects of the software and business.






8159
Living Room / Re: Cute jokes' thread
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 08:49 PM »
(see attachment in previous post)
-cranioscopical (March 08, 2011, 08:46 PM)

Bwahahahahahaha~!

I was just talking to my wife last night about Comic Sans. I MUST forward this to her!
8160
A few weeks ago someone from an enterprise told me they couldn't use it due to the current licensing scheme (they considered CC incompatible with an enterprise environment). I even I told them I didn't care for the money (since they really only needed one user), but they needed a "formal" way of saying it, I needed to have a license stating it.

That's pretty normal. I remember rewriting a part of a license for IBM because they couldn't use the software with one clause in the EULA.
8161
Living Room / Re: Technical Excuses for Porn (Safe For Work)
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 04:28 PM »
Wasn't she invited as a guest speaker for some compression conference, or was that just a dry dream I had after reading about her being tracked down for the aforementioned interview? :)

She was. :)

http://www.cs.cmu.ed...apg/lenna_visit.html

Yes, it's true! Lenna attended the 50th Anniversary IS&T conference in Boston held in May 1997.

According to all reports, the event went spectacularly. Everyone was excited to finally meet Lenna in person and get her autograph. And she got a chance to meet some of the many people who have been using her picture as the basis of their research.





8162
Living Room / Re: The 10 idiosyncrasies of Steve Jobs
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 04:21 PM »
A lot of that makes sense. He's a smart guy. It's just too bad that in business he's out to rival the Devil.
8163
Living Room / A Fun Video About Apple
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 05:23 AM »
Just for fun:



8164
Living Room / Technical Excuses for Porn (Safe For Work)
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 04:40 AM »
If you work with images, a standard photo used in imaging is from the November 1972 edition of Playboy.

http://www.ecogito.n...t/articles/lena.html (SFW)

Anyone familiar with digital image processing will surely recognize the image of Lena. While going through some old usenet discussions, I got to know that Lena has a history worth all the attention that has been paid to her over the years by countless image processing researchers.

lenaLena Sjööblom, (also spelled Lenna by many publications) was the Playboy playmate in November 1972 and rose to fame in the computer world when researchers at the University of Southern California scanned and digitized her image in June 1973. (Lena herself never know of her fame until she was interviewed by a computer magazine in Sweden where she lives with her husband and children).

According to the IEEE PCS Newsletter of May/June 2001, they were hurriedly searching for a glossy image which they could scan and use for a conference paper when someone walked in with a copy of Playboy. The engineers tore off the top third of the centerfold and scanned it with a Muirhead wire photo scanner (a distant cry from the flatbed scanners of today) by wrapping it around the drum of the scanner. (Now you know why the image shows only a small part of the entire picture.. discounting of course, the fact that the complete picture would raise quite a few eyebrows. Follow the link at the bottom of this article to see the complete picture.)

But I really don't think you needed an excuse... ;)
8165
Running Mac OS X on Windows is possible using VirtualBox. But, as was mentioned already, it's illegal.
That's what she said - the bitch-queen Steve Jobs.

I guess it might be legal to run Mac OS X in VirtualBox running on Mac OS X on Apple Hardware ;)

Probably if you legally own another copy of the hardware... :P
8166
Microsoft makes you sign an agreement (like Apple does), but doesn't flaunt that in your face. That's the difference. You can be nice and decent, or you can be like Apple.
8167
Running Mac OS X on Windows is possible using VirtualBox. But, as was mentioned already, it's illegal.
That's what she said - the bitch-queen Steve Jobs.

Funny. I just posted one of the queen's threats...
8168
Developer's Corner / Thank You For Treating Everyone Like a Criminal, Apple
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 02:48 AM »
From an Apple developer email right at the top, first thing:

Pre-release software is Apple Confidential information. Unauthorized distribution of pre-release software or disclosure of information relating to pre-release software (including the distribution of screen shots) may result in immediate termination of your Apple Developer Program membership, and may subject you to both civil and criminal liability.

I love being treated like a criminal. It's so much fun~! I feel like all "Reservoir Dogs" bad-boy and stuff...

Sigh...

8169
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 12:56 AM »
One thing I should point out from the OpenCandy SDK Developer Mode Test Report:

Status OK. Found Opencandy EULA in current dialog window.

So the problem above has clearly been addressed.

(I'd tested it without, and it fails the tests without it.)
8170
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 08, 2011, 12:37 AM »
So what is Pokki? It looks like Adobe AIR.

I haven't gotten that far yet.

Mind you, I've signed up with OpenCandy, had several emails with them, downloaded their SDK, integrated it into an installer, gotten it working, tested it briefly, and am about to do some final code "cleanup" (formatting, comments, etc.) and final testing...

Got to say -- they make the process nicely streamlined and painless. All my little speed-bumps were from Inno Setup and Pascal scripting.

For those that haven't done this kind of stuff before, it can take weeks or months to get done. The sheer speed & ease with OpenCandy is impressive.

8171
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 07, 2011, 07:48 PM »
FYI - Just to confirm, the latest OpenCandy SDK does not set off Windows Defender or Avast.
8172
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 07, 2011, 06:57 PM »
And a Forbes article about OpenCandy:

http://blogs.forbes....e-power-of-the-team/

Not much there, but a little taste of OpenCandy. :P
8173
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 07, 2011, 06:51 PM »
Downloading the Pokki SDK now. :) The Pokki blog is here: http://blog.pokki.com/
8174
General Software Discussion / Re: What the hell is OpenCandy?
« Last post by Renegade on March 07, 2011, 06:43 PM »
ok here is my bet, I am putting my 100$ if anyone wants to bet on it.
I am %100$ sure that in 2 years OC will become an application that will try to install hidden stuff and spy on your download-installation activity. If anyone wants to bet I am accepting bets. Since we do not want to gamble lets keep the amount not more than 100$.
* scancode puts $25 against Kartal

Looks like scannie owes kartal 25 bucks.


Hold off on paying that bet for now...

It sounds like we've got a false positive on our hands here.

http://www.opencandy...soft-adware-debacle/

Namely, one individual OpenCandy partner (out of hundreds) appears to have been mistakenly missing an End User License Agreement (EULA) in their installer. This means that any consumer installing this specific partner’s software did not agree to OpenCandy’s transmission and collection of anonymous information (used for purposes of making a software recommendation).

Ok, a mistake. A mistake on the part of our partner and a mistake by us for not having the right process in place to catch that the EULA had been removed after it had passed our compliance process. The partner has since added their EULA.


False positives for software authors are akin to burning someone at the stake, then half way through, deciding to douse the flames.

The security vendors are witch-hunters and inquisitors. Sure, there are witches out there, but they just don't seem to care if they burn a few people along with the witches.

In any event, I'm looking at OpenCandy right now to help fund development at a site I'm working on.

From what I've read so far, OpenCandy seems to be a decent company. There will always be people that don't like any method at all for software to make money. I suppose that they'll just need to find some other software that they like. The OpenCandy offerings seem to be pretty fair from what I can see.

Incidentally, I found this:

http://www.pokki.com/

Owned by OpenCandy. It looks quite interesting, so I'm looking into it as well.

8175
I just came across this one:
 (see attachment in previous post)

W-W-W-WTF?

Can we say, "broken"?
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