On Mon, 26 Feb 2007, Eric Gauthier wrote:
Generally, we've found that most end users don't even know that their systems are infected - be it with spyware, bots, etc - and are happy when we can help them clear things up as they usually aren't in a position to fix things on their own. I know that the really bad analogy of driving a car has been used a few times in this thread, but I think part of the analogy is true. If someone owns and uses a car but the car has no indicator lights to say that something is wrong, its hard to believe that the driver will be able to fix the problem or even know to contact the repair shop. We've tried to give our users that "indicator" light and some help repairing it
You forgot a big difference. Universities usually don't give tuition refunds, so you have a $40,000 "penalty" hanging over the student's head which gives students an incentive to listen and want to respond to your notices. It's similar to why public libraries have a much harder time getting people to return books than university libraries. Ask car repair shops about people driving their cars after that indicator light turns on with smoke belching out of it until the car grinds to a stop. While consumers might miss one notification method, after notifying people by e-mail, telephone, snail mail, web redirects, and any other way you can think of; consumers are very good at ignoring warnings until their computer stops working. Detection or notification isn't the problem. Getting people to want to fix their computer is. If there isn't a way to test if the computer is actually fixed, then you just repeatedly cycle around the consumer saying its fixed/nothing is wrong and the ISP claiming its broken. What's the Turing test for a fixed computer?