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Since scumware is software designed by publishers and vendors that allow them to snoop on your browsing activity, invade your privacy, and flood you with those offensive popup ads. If you are like most users on the internet, chances are you are probably infected with these applications. The following items can and will happen if you do not do anything to resolve your scumware issues immediately.

All information and keystrokes you enter to your browser can be intercepted whether you use secured socket layer (SSL) or not.
Unauthorized sites can clutter your desktop as uninvited icons.
Unauthorized sites can add themselves to your internet favorites.
Your browsing history can be tracked and monitored.
Unwanted toolbars and searchbars can install themselves to your browser without your knowledge or consent.
Your personal information and address book can be sold to other parties without your knowledge or consent.
Your default homepage and settings can be hijacked so you can not change them back to the default setting.
These malicious components not only invade your PC so they cannot be removed, but take up your hard drive space and slow down your PC. Your processor resources are well spent up by those scumware items which constantly check and reinstall themselves, every few minutes, to see if there are attempts to remove them.

If you have no luck with your anti-virus, anti-spyware software, and it is usually too late to download more security patches, here are some steps as the last resort before having to do a full reinstallation of your Windows OS.

Run Windows in safe mode with no networking, if possible (press F8 on Windows 2000 during boot). Safe mode loads a minimum of drivers, and provides far less resources for the scumware to work with.

Terminate one or more suspicious processes in the Task Manager. Leave the Task Manager window open. After a few minutes, if the removed process reappears, it is most likely a scumware. Note the unfamiliar name of the process (for example, rtnhiad.exe, rtnhiada.exe, vcclient.exe, vcserver.exe).

WARNING
The information presented on the following pages illustrates how to
backup compliant Video-DVDs to DVD±RW / DVD±R media.
The software tools and information presented on these pages
work with unencrypted DVD files only and are not made
to create illegal copies of copyrighted DVD material.

Please record responsibly.
Before copying anything onto a recordable media including
CD-R, CD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD-R or DVD-RW
please be sure that you are excersizing your fair use rights
under the copyright law of your country
and not violating any local copyright laws.

DISCLAIMER
The software from this web site is designed to assist you
in reproducing only the material in which you own the copyright or
for which you have obtained permission to copy from the copyright owner.
Unless you own the copyright or
hold permission to copy from the copyright owner,
you may be violating copyright law and may be subject to
payment of damages and other remedies.

If you are uncertain about your rights in a court of law,
you should contact your legal counsel before proceeding to download
or use the software products and/or information from this web site.
You assume full responsibility for the legal and
responsible use of the information and software downloaded or
acquired by any delivery method via this web site and its affiliates.

It is against the law in many countries to reproduce copyrighted material.
Some countries' laws only allow you to make a limited number of
backup copies of any software or media
for personal and archival purposes.
By browsing this site you also acknowledge that you are
the sole "Owner" of all copyrighted material that might be reproduced.
In no way this site and its affiliates are held responsible
for any violation or potential violations of
copyright infringement that you may perform.


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