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one-time permanent blocking of MRT

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one-time permanent blocking of MRT Costin Gusa 05-31-2008
Posted by Costin Gusa on May 31, 2008, 5:13 am
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Does anyone know how to permanently decline installation of Malware Removal
Tool ? In 15 years of computer use I have never been infected and I don't
need the MRT to be offered as an update. If i click 'don't show this update
again', it will dissapear, but it will prompt me to install the previous'
month MRT, and then I would have to repeat this for all months since MRT has
been released. I want to decline this tool ONCE and FOREVER!
No, disabling automatic updates is not an option.
And no, using WSUS for a approving updates for a single home computer is
also not an option.

Posted by Steve Riley [MSFT] on June 1, 2008, 4:00 am
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I can understand the desire to be in control of the software that you run on
your computer, but in this particular case I'd ask that you not worry about
the MSRT. It installs with each monthly update, runs the next time you
reboot, then deletes itself. Worldwide the tool has executed over two
billion times and has removed about 60 million infections from 25 million
computers. So while it's admirable that you're practicing safe computing and
have avoided malware, we believe that one way to help reduce everyone's
exposure is to have a consistent, repeatable scan for some of the most
dangerous stuff happen automatically. Think of it as a public service for
all computers running Windows.

--
Steve Riley
steve.riley@microsoft.com
http://blogs.technet.com/steriley
http://www.protectyourwindowsnetwork.com



> Does anyone know how to permanently decline installation of Malware
> Removal
> Tool ? In 15 years of computer use I have never been infected and I don't
> need the MRT to be offered as an update. If i click 'don't show this
> update
> again', it will dissapear, but it will prompt me to install the previous'
> month MRT, and then I would have to repeat this for all months since MRT
> has
> been released. I want to decline this tool ONCE and FOREVER!
> No, disabling automatic updates is not an option.
> And no, using WSUS for a approving updates for a single home computer is
> also not an option.


Posted by Costin Gusa on June 1, 2008, 6:29 am
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Hi Steve,

I would understand and tolerate the tool if it had deleted itself.
However, I do get irritated everytime I run Spacemonger (free tool) to check
who's eating my/(other peoples') disk space and always find MRT.EXE sitting
there in %SystemRoot%\System32...
Could you (or you all other reading this thread) check your and a couple of
your friends' computers for the presence of %SystemRoot%\System32\MRT.EXE ?

Many thanks,
Costin


"Steve Riley [MSFT]" wrote:

> I can understand the desire to be in control of the software that you run on
> your computer, but in this particular case I'd ask that you not worry about
> the MSRT. It installs with each monthly update, runs the next time you
> reboot, then deletes itself. Worldwide the tool has executed over two
> billion times and has removed about 60 million infections from 25 million
> computers. So while it's admirable that you're practicing safe computing and
> have avoided malware, we believe that one way to help reduce everyone's
> exposure is to have a consistent, repeatable scan for some of the most
> dangerous stuff happen automatically. Think of it as a public service for
> all computers running Windows.
>
> --
> Steve Riley
> steve.riley@microsoft.com
> http://blogs.technet.com/steriley
> http://www.protectyourwindowsnetwork.com
>
>
>
> > Does anyone know how to permanently decline installation of Malware
> > Removal
> > Tool ? In 15 years of computer use I have never been infected and I don't
> > need the MRT to be offered as an update. If i click 'don't show this
> > update
> > again', it will dissapear, but it will prompt me to install the previous'
> > month MRT, and then I would have to repeat this for all months since MRT
> > has
> > been released. I want to decline this tool ONCE and FOREVER!
> > No, disabling automatic updates is not an option.
> > And no, using WSUS for a approving updates for a single home computer is
> > also not an option.
>

Posted by Kerry Brown on June 1, 2008, 11:54 am
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Set Windows Updates to off, then check manually. This gives you almost total
control over what gets downloaded. The only things that will be downloaded
without approval are updates to WU itself when you check for new updates.

If you are that worried about a 16 MB file "eating" disk space then you have
other problems with the system. There are far more egregious "eaters" of
disk space than MRT. If you are down to where one 16 MB file is a problem
the system is already disastrously low on resources.

--
Kerry Brown
MS-MVP - Windows Desktop Experience: Systems Administration
http://www.vistahelp.ca/phpBB2/



> Hi Steve,
>
> I would understand and tolerate the tool if it had deleted itself.
> However, I do get irritated everytime I run Spacemonger (free tool) to
> check
> who's eating my/(other peoples') disk space and always find MRT.EXE
> sitting
> there in %SystemRoot%\System32...
> Could you (or you all other reading this thread) check your and a couple
> of
> your friends' computers for the presence of %SystemRoot%\System32\MRT.EXE
> ?
>
> Many thanks,
> Costin
>
>
> "Steve Riley [MSFT]" wrote:
>
>> I can understand the desire to be in control of the software that you run
>> on
>> your computer, but in this particular case I'd ask that you not worry
>> about
>> the MSRT. It installs with each monthly update, runs the next time you
>> reboot, then deletes itself. Worldwide the tool has executed over two
>> billion times and has removed about 60 million infections from 25 million
>> computers. So while it's admirable that you're practicing safe computing
>> and
>> have avoided malware, we believe that one way to help reduce everyone's
>> exposure is to have a consistent, repeatable scan for some of the most
>> dangerous stuff happen automatically. Think of it as a public service for
>> all computers running Windows.
>>
>> --
>> Steve Riley
>> steve.riley@microsoft.com
>> http://blogs.technet.com/steriley
>> http://www.protectyourwindowsnetwork.com
>>
>>
>>
>> > Does anyone know how to permanently decline installation of Malware
>> > Removal
>> > Tool ? In 15 years of computer use I have never been infected and I
>> > don't
>> > need the MRT to be offered as an update. If i click 'don't show this
>> > update
>> > again', it will dissapear, but it will prompt me to install the
>> > previous'
>> > month MRT, and then I would have to repeat this for all months since
>> > MRT
>> > has
>> > been released. I want to decline this tool ONCE and FOREVER!
>> > No, disabling automatic updates is not an option.
>> > And no, using WSUS for a approving updates for a single home computer
>> > is
>> > also not an option.
>>


Posted by Costin Gusa on June 2, 2008, 1:49 am
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"Kerry Brown" wrote:

> Set Windows Updates to off, then check manually. This gives you almost total
> control over what gets downloaded. The only things that will be downloaded
> without approval are updates to WU itself when you check for new updates.
>

I'm sorry I am forced to repeat myself to people who cannot read:
"No, disabling automatic updates is not an option. "

> If you are that worried about a 16 MB file "eating" disk space then you have
> other problems with the system. There are far more egregious "eaters" of
> disk space than MRT. If you are down to where one 16 MB file is a problem
> the system is already disastrously low on resources.


********************************************************
You are completely offtopic. RE-READ my posts and find the questions (there
are 2 - "TWO") I asked for.
********************************************************

Offtopic: Yes, I am worried about the disk space, but since you have already
thrown down the gauntlet: those 16MB of free space are MINE, i have PAID for
them and therefore is my RIGHT to KNOW how my MONEY are used.
Upgrading storage just because you are unable to identify the cause for
disk consumption? Replacing things (read 'from a small drive to a larger
drive') because you simply cannot handle them and not because of real storage
needs? No thanks. At least not until my brain is still performing well.
FYI, my system volume has 30Gb with over 20Gb free.

[old crap deleted]

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