francis_tzf wrote:
> Windows Update is telling me I need to download and install "Windows
> Genuine Advantage Notification (KB905474)" which "notifies you if
> your copy of Windows is not genuine". My computer is a Dell
> Latitude laptop with Windows XP Pro installed on it by Dell. I
> presume therefore that my copy of Windows is genuine. Ordinarily, I
> routinely install updates recommended by Windows Update. This one
> worries me a little, however, as I have read here and there of
> problems it has caused others. So, my questions: (1) Is there a way
> to tell Windows Update that I don't want/ need this update which
> will remove from the notification area or system tray the little
> shield with an exclamation point on it, and (2) Am I right in being
> concerned about installing this update, or am I being overly
> cautious because any bugs etc. that may have been in it have been
> removed/fixed?
Shenan Stanley wrote:
> I'd just install it - the percentage of those that 'have problems'
> is *very small*. In very few cases (with the newer versions of
> WGAN) where it ends up being a problem was there not a problem
> already being exposed by the application.
>
> Having said that...
>
> AFAIK, it is *not* necessary to install it - and your easiest
> method for not installing it would be not to do automatic updates
> and manually visit http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com (updating
> whatever you need to scan your computer for updates properly) and
> do a custom scan. When it lists out the updates, uncheck and
> expand that one and tell it to hide it. Get everything else you
> think you want from the updates - although I highly suggest you
> skip the Optional Hardware Updates.
Alias wrote:
> All the OP needs it one case, his own. How many successful installs
> will not be all that relevant, now will it?
>
> It is definitely not necessary and can only serve to provide a real
> headache if it mistakenly sees his XP as "not genuine".
>
> I suggest that the OP NOT do this unless, of course, he wants to
> jump through the WGA ActiveX crap. My advice with auto updates is
> the only way to completely avoid WGA in all its nefarious flavors.
That is your paranoia and opinion. I appreciate you sharing it.
The original poster may/may not share your feelings on the matter and the
history of issues with it do not seem to back up the need for the *do not
install it* at this time.
While it is true - if the OP turns out to be one in the small percentage
that has issues - given the information they have (Dell with the original
installation, no reported issues through now, etc) - the OP, I believe,
would be fine with the installation.
I gave both options. The decision is up to the OP.
It would be nice if the OP would come back and let everyone know which
direction they chose and how things went, either way. ;-)
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html