• devttyeu 12 hours ago

This is so much worse that the title makes it out to be:

  1. Your OS installs malware (technically manufacturers software) from a 3rd party vendor in background, zero user interaction
  2. Happens as soon as you or anyone with physical access plug in a device into the HDMI port
  3. That malware has internet and full system access, no sandboxing
  4. It starts with every system boot
  5. This software gets installed when you plug in a new LG monitor
  6. OR ALREADY HAD AN OLDER LG MONITOR PLUGGED IN, BECAUSE LG APPARENTLY ROLLED THIS OUT FOR MANY OLDER MODELS TOO!!
  7. And yes, if you think that's horrendous, as mentioned in the video below, that also applies to 'Professional' LG monitors!

This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

GamersNexus has a video diving deeper into what LG did here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9uefFYe6bM

• orbital-decay 11 hours ago

>This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

Printer, mouse, tablet and display tablet makers use this to insert their crapware since at least Windows Vista or Windows 7, I think. The last one I remember is plugging a Razer mouse just to watch it instantly pulling 1.5GB of bloated junk with "telemetry" exfiltrating the data from my gaming PC in realtime. At least it doesn't leave my mouse in a non-working state when I disconnect the internet, like it used to. Thanks, Razer!

Microsoft is to blame here, really. They have a mechanism to block any vendor (supposedly to avoid reputational risks to their brand due to buggy drivers, at least that was their excuse back in the day), but aren't even using it to block these contraptions. Entire businesses are built on this, e.g. Razer is probably more of a marketing/data company now rather than a hardware shop.

• yndoendo 9 hours ago

Back in my Window days. I would start the driver installation and let it sit. Open the temp folder and copy content the install extracted to a new directory. Cancel the installation. Open Device Manager and install the drivers from there so non of the excessive bloat was installed.

This worked greater with being an IT consultant. The client's machine to run smoother and drivers installed fast since they would buy multiples of the same equipment at once.

Now I only use Linux on personal equipment. You have to pay me to use Microsoft products. Microsoft has become shit-ware.

• ironmanszombie 2 hours ago

When .INF was all you needed (and some .cat / sys)! More recently, I found out that approach can sometimes lead to missing features when using the hardware. Even though the driver is installed correctly. I was probably missing something but didn't dig deeper into it.

• IgorPartola 6 hours ago

To be fair Microsoft was always shitware. I don’t remember a time when using a Windows machine just worked, didn’t take up gigabytes of space, didn’t crash, and didn’t get messed up by simply using it requiring a yearly or semi-yearly reinstall.

• hx8 an hour ago

I remember when Windows didn't take gigabytes of space because there wasn't gigabytes of space, and it was still shitware.

• inigyou 2 hours ago

Windows in the 95-XP era wasn't exactly high-quality software, but it was genuine technical innovation, doing what you otherwise couldn't do.

• akurtzhs 4 hours ago

Windows 3.1? It was only 6 3.5” disks.

To be fair, I had stretches of 2K, XP, 7 and 10 working acceptably.

• hx8 an hour ago

These eras of Windows had their own dark patterns that were incredibly anti-consumer. No one's lives were improved because they installed the Ask Jeeves toolbar, but people were asked to install it millions and millions of times.

• LocalH 3 hours ago

Microsoft BASIC was a pretty decent interpreter, I wouldn't call it "shitware", so there you go?

• RajT88 7 hours ago

7zip will do the trick for a lot of self extractors.

• clickety_clack 9 hours ago

These days, even a window gets updates.

• thewebguyd 7 hours ago

> but aren't even using it to block these contraptions

Even worse, this one is installed via Windows update. I have an LG monitor and noticed the stupid LG app all of the sudden, uninstalled it, and saw it pop up again as an update in Windows update.

Microsoft is actively enabling this behavior.

• mcv 2 hours ago

I don't understand how this is legal. Isn't this malware? Isn't it illegal to install malware on someone's computer without their permission? Or is this very illegal, but nobody cares about that anymore?

• jwrallie 31 minutes ago

I guess it’s becoming harder for MS to define malware in a way that would catch this behavior but does not flag their own products as well.

• nemomarx an hour ago

you'd need to legally prove it's malware and they would definitely claim it's useful software tools that come with the hardware or something

• londons_explore 6 hours ago

Microsoft could easily make a rulebook for drivers, and say any company which violates the rulebook can only send open source drivers, or even ban them from driver distribution entirely which would quickly kill a consumer hardware brand.

• benoau 8 hours ago

My Logitech mouse does this but it prompts to install their crapware and adds that to the startup programs, it's not automatically installed.

• kjs3 9 hours ago

The last one I remember is plugging a Razer mouse

Oh, yeah. Bought this overpriced but heavily hyped Razer mouse and it wouldn't even work right until it had an internet connection. A MOUSE. I'd never encountered something so blatantly customer hostile in my life. Never even looked at another Razer product, never will, and will tell anyone who will listen that Razer is a terrible company full of objectively terrible people.

• Chaosvex 9 hours ago

Razer was always low quality garbage at premium prices. Gamer marketing for you.

• dimgl 8 hours ago

What do you recommend instead? In my opinion the Razer mice are always superior for FPS.

• bayindirh an hour ago

I used to pulverize my friends with a Logitech G700 in Quake3/OpenArena. I'm sure it has a newer version.

Razer was never "definitively better". It's merely competitive with other top ones, that's all. Before G700, Logitech even had a mouse with two sensors and was the undisputed king for FPS quite some time.

• skirmish 4 hours ago

Mousereview reddit always recommends looking at Chinese gaming mice, they have reasonable prices, often clone popular mouse shapes from large brands (see [1]) and have the latest sensors.

[1] EloShapes find similar: https://www.eloshapes.com/mouse/find-similar

• ak217 7 hours ago

Logitech all the way.

Logitech is a truly innovative company. They actually care deeply about ergonomics. They also introduced the first mass market application of programmable magnets (in the MX Master mouse scroll wheel) - that's incredibly advanced materials science.

• eknkc 5 hours ago

They also managed to develop a steaming pile of shit called Logi Options+ which you need to set up your mouse (I only used the mac version to be fair)

• draugadrotten 14 minutes ago

I can happily share that there is an open-source alternative, https://github.com/TomBadash/Mouser

• Tallain 3 hours ago

You don't need it. The mouse functions perfectly fine without it. And you can even switch DPI when the mouse has a button to do that.

The software allows for fine-tuned settings, button remapping, etc. It is awful software, to be sure, but it's not necessary to use the mouse.

• badpun 3 hours ago

I’m no longer sure about their quality though. Out of four Logitech mice I bought recently (four different models), two died within a year. At least their warranty repair/replace process was decent.

• bayindirh an hour ago

I had several Marathon mice which broke their 3-year battery life promises, by lasting way longer. I had to retire them since their plastics degraded in some cases after 6-7 years (I had several at one point due to having multiple PCs being used every day for long stretches).

Currently I use their MX Keys Minis, MX Anywhere mice and trackballs. All are rock solid. Bolt receiver works great with Linux via Solaar allowing full suite of features.

Oh, Firmware Update Daemon supports Logitech hardware, too. If Logitech sends in new firmware, it pops up instantly to upgrade.

• mcv an hour ago

In my family we use the Glorious Model O. My son wanted one ages ago (I got him a mini), and it was so nice, I got one for myself. Now my oldest has a big one, and my youngest uses the mini.

We've had them for years. The mini has lost the button that lets you select speed, but other than that they're still great. For better than the various Logitechs I had before.

The only real downside is the bright flashing led patterns. I've gotten used to them.

• carey 3 hours ago

Their buttons fail way too easily, but can usually be fixed with some WD-40, CRC 5-56, or any similar thin oil.

• prmoustache 2 hours ago

What do you do to your mouses to make them fail so quickly? Are you throwing them randomly accross the room?

• ssl-3 2 hours ago

Some Logitech mouse switches have been known to fail in normal use.

At least one person has put together a good overview of what they think is happening: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5BhECVlKJA (details in video description)

• kay_o 2 hours ago

They just fail. Particularly the office mice don't last very long for gaming (orders of magnitude more travel and clicks)

• midnightbobarun 2 hours ago

I'd say any cheap mouse off Amazon that has a pleasing shape is usually good enough, but I've also never ranked above gold in any competitive PvP shooter, so there's that :')

I'm currently using a wireless ProtoArc mouse. Good shape, can adjust DPI on the fly, hasn't broken even after a year. I think it was like 30 bucks maybe?

• xboxnolifes 6 hours ago

80% of a mouse decision should be which form fits best for your hand. Unfortunately for me that's razor mice. (Well, the Viper v2, I dont love the v3 I have now.)

• Hikikomori 25 minutes ago

Depends on which one and when it was sold. Some razers have pretty outdated sensors, plenty of better, lighter and cheaper options available.

• orbital-decay 8 hours ago

Some Razer mice were somewhat good in the times when the sensor mattered, with the rest of them being absolute garbage (starting with the Copperhead which barely worked). Today there's a ton of niche manufacturers with great internals that will exceed any requirements you might possibly have.

If you're really interested in FPS performance and not just the brand, choose for the ergonomics first, it's not possible to recommend anything without knowing your play style, hand size etc. The shape and weight you like, and complementary feet and mat with the exact static/dynamic friction you need. Then check if the internals are good enough (they likely are) and whether there are any firmware issues like extra jitter on flicks or unavoidable debounce lag, then look at the required software. There's a ton of mice with excellent performance that are configurable without ANY software.

• sbrother 7 hours ago

> choose for the ergonomics first

This is unfortunately why I keep buying the Razer Deathadder Pro. It fits my hand perfectly and is super accurate. I hate their software, and the company, but the performance and ergonomics of the mouse are worth it to me.

• orbital-decay 7 hours ago

DA has probably the most widely cloned shape in the market and has many identical or compatible alternatives and clones, check e.g. MCHOSE A7 Ultra RE or Pulsar Xlite v4 Large (never had either so can't vouch for their software)

https://www.eloshapes.com/mouse/compare?p=razer-deathadder-v...

https://www.rtings.com/mouse/tools/3d-model-shape-compare/3d...

• simoncion 6 hours ago

If you can find an original Glorious [0] Model O, that's a nice piece of hardware. The new Model O looks like it only works with their new, totally garbage Glorious CORE v2 software.

If you never want to change the DPIs, lighting, or button assignments, & etc then you don't need the software... so if what the hardware does out of the box is fine for you, then you don't need to worry about how trash CORE v2 is.

CORE v1 is okay, but still notably worse than the Model O software. I don't know why they farmed out the development of CORE v2 to "the CEO's middle-school nephew who's 'good with computers'", but they did.

[0] ...they were originally called "Glorious PC Gaming Race" (in homage to the Reddit meme), but dropped that last bit from their company name a while back...

• J_Shelby_J 5 hours ago

Model I with four thumb buttons is irreplaceable for me

• simoncion 4 hours ago

I also have a Model I and am unhappy with the fact that -when last I checked- you can't configure the three or four extra buttons so they're actually buttons. Your only option is for them to generate keypresses, or do mouse-management functions -such as "cycle DPI"-.

This is... frustrating. Multi-button HID devices are -arguably- easier to do than something that pretends to be both a mouse and a keyboard. I get that some games may not understand how to deal with mice that have more than four or five mouse buttons, it'd be quite nice if I had the option to set things up so that I can use them as buttons in games that know how to handle them.

• aeon_ai 8 hours ago

Logitech have always made great gaming mice in my experience, at a reasonable price

• LoganDark 8 hours ago

I know hardly anything about FPS but the reason I like Razer mice is the hardware macros. Configuration profiles are saved to the device and macros are performed at the hardware level. Some actions work with the razer software but most of them don't have to.

• vultour 4 hours ago

You literally need two or three mouse buttons for a FPS game. This argument might have worked if you said MMO because there’s a million abilities you can use but there’s absolutely nothing special about Razer mice when it comes to FPS specifically.

• kjs3 8 hours ago

Gamer marketing for you.

Which I fell for. Fool me once and all that...

• stego-tech 10 hours ago

This. Microsoft has chosen to allow this functionality, despite it being a very clear breach of trust with customers.

LG/Dell/et al should be shamed and blamed for even trying this shit in the first place, but it’s Microsoft who holds the blame for allowing such malware and spyware trash through their own update service.

• solarkraft 10 hours ago

You’re acting like Microsoft aren’t pushing malware themselves.

• tbrake 9 hours ago

That's just a parallel fact, no one's "acting" like anything?

What were you actually trying to say?

• solarkraft 5 hours ago

I am saying that people here seem to be appealing to Microsoft as an authority that should be interested in stopping this, perhaps because they are morally superior or concerned about their reputation. They are not.

• brookst 9 hours ago

How in the world does that absolve Dell/etc, OR reduce Microsoft’s culpability for letting their update service be abused?

• jayd16 6 hours ago

Microsoft could end up being a higher barrier but how much do we really want that?

To me, it seems like LG is the one to blame.

• CodesInChaos 6 hours ago

> Microsoft could end up being a higher barrier but how much do we really want that?

For drivers installed automatically via Windows Update? Absolutely yes.

For software the user installs manually? No.

• LocalH 10 minutes ago

Microsoft has been coddling big devs (read: the devs that code this absolute garbage) for decades. They have this mentality "if we change anything, and anything breaks for current users, they're going to blame us instead of the vendor" and that might have been useful in the 95 days, but it's outmoded. They need to have the balls to break every vendor in 2026 if they're doing things they shouldn't.

I don't trust Microsoft not to be a modern capitalist, but I trust the companies they enable even less.

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

> This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

Microsoft has been allowing this sort of ludicrous behavior for decades at this point, it's not a new issue. What's new is how visible LG made their malware, compared to previous auto-installs that happen like this, where they try to make the thing not so in your face, as they know there will be a huge backlash.

I don't know what Microsoft is thinking even allowing and enabling this sort of thing, they've lost all touch when it comes to building things for users.

• MichaelZuo 11 hours ago

Maybe some decision makers do indeed have negative aspirations…

• ihsw 11 hours ago

If you have been reading the news about Windows 11 then I will enlighten you -- they view the Windows 11 consumer business as a cost center that must be mitigated.

As such, all manner of monetization has been approved and it will continued to be approved without regard for user experience.

This article obviates that this is not an LG problem, it is a Microsoft problem.

Also, don't fool yourself if you think this won't come to the Linux world.

• Grombobulous 10 hours ago

Just look at Microsoft’s revenue breakdown that they publish. Windows revenue is alarmingly small.

I don’t think it’s a loss leader but Microsoft gets almost nothing from OEM Windows licenses and basically nobody buys it retail.

This is not coming to the Linux world. The moment this sort of thing happens, distros get forked.

• geon 10 hours ago

Aren’t ms completely dependent on consumer windows for mindshare?

I doubt anyone would bother getting into programming with ms tech unless they just happened to run it on their desktop.

• ufmace 9 hours ago

I don't think they are anymore. The vast majority of ordinary person computer/internet use has already moved to smartphones, tablets, smart TVs and other such devices. It seems nowadays many people don't even know the basics about how to use a desktop operating system.

• Aerroon 7 hours ago

I find this hard to believe considering how bad the UIs are on phones and TVs. Even google.com does not offer feature parity between their desktop and mobile websites.

My phone still didn't come with a functional paint or notepad apps. Google docs is a horrible experience on phones (but at least it works now - a few years ago it was straight up unusable).

And you're telling me that this is the only computing platform for a lot of people? How is everything still so unusable about it then?

My experience tells me that everything mobile is basically an afterthought outside of a few dozen websites and I guess phone games.

• embedding-shape 3 hours ago

> My phone still didn't come with a functional paint or notepad apps [...] And you're telling me that this is the only computing platform for a lot of people? How is everything still so unusable about it then?

Not to sound harsh, but you come at this with an somewhat old perspective, the same one I grew up with too and probably also retain too much of.

People don't open their phones looking for something like paint or notepad apps, they want a messenger/social network to connect with their family/friends which is most likely why they got the phone in the first place, and if they're "advanced", they'll even edit their own photos and images but via a whole host of various phone image editors. Sometimes the social network offers those things too, sometimes as separate apps, people use that sort of stuff instead of looking for "paint.exe" or tools to crop/edit images in a more, I guess "crude" way that you and I might be used to and favor still today.

• ufmace 5 hours ago

All that stuff actually works decently well on mobile... as long as one is willing to accept certain compromises.

Note-taking works fine, in Google Keep, Apple Notes, or some other cloud equivalent. Yup, your data is in the cloud and owned by one of those tech megacorps, but most people just don't care.

Basic photo editing works okay too, in Google Photos, Apple Photos, etc. Ditto the cloud stuff.

What really makes most desktop users outliers is caring about, or even being aware at all of the concept of, actually owning your own data versus trusting cloud providers for everything.

• mrob 6 hours ago

That fact that you're posting on a web forum makes you an outlier. Most people only passively consume, and mobile devices are good enough for that.

• picofarad 7 hours ago

My phone still doesn't have a calculator app. The thought of trying to add one that isnt wolfram alpha is anxiety-producing.

• Obscurity4340 35 minutes ago

Calculator Note apps are much better anyway

• smelendez 9 hours ago

Right. Laptops are basically work (or school) tools now for a lot of people. They might have one tucked away that they pull out now and then when they need it, similar to a power drill or a sewing machine. It’s not a daily use device.

I think it helped Microsoft historically that people used their operating systems at home, although even then a lot of people would have learned Windows at work or school first.

• Grombobulous 5 hours ago

Microsoft will happily sell you someone else’s tech stack on Azure.

My macOS-using employer gives much more money to Microsoft than Apple.

Cloud SaaS things they’re using: Entra ID, Power BI, Sharepoint, corporate email (365), OneDrive.

Microsoft applications installed by my employer on my PC: Teams, Office including Outlook, Defender.

Our applications are Java running on Linux and we could migrate 100% of our platform to Azure without any issue if we had a reason to do that.

• eastbound 10 hours ago

MS owns Typescript and NPM and Azure and LinkedIn. I know you meant programming on Windows, but even if Windows disappears, many of us will owe our job to Microsoft.

• VorpalWay 9 hours ago

Dont forget they own github too. The vast majority of open source software is on there these days.

Yes there are other options: gitlab.com, some project specific gitlab instances (freedesktop for example), forejo / codeberg, and the Linux kernel is off doing it's own thing with mailing lists instead. I even come across code on SourceForge every now and then still. But all of these are super niche.

• solarkraft 10 hours ago

They own Typescript? I wasn’t aware that they control the organization, but that ought to be easy enough to fork. NPM is a bigger one, but also not too huge. Azure is only used by people who already have Microsoft/Windows buy-in.

• embedding-shape 2 hours ago

> They own Typescript? I wasn’t aware that they control the organization,

I genuinely don't know, got curious and went to typescriptlang.org to find some "About" page or "Governance" or something else, but couldn't find anything at all about it. It was exclusively developed by Microsoft for two years, and with no other clear governance/decision structure today as far as I can see, doesn't that exactly mean that Microsoft controls the entire "organization"? It's not clear what "organization" you're referring to either, the GitHub organization? I'd assume that's also 100% Microsoft controlled.

• chuckadams 8 hours ago

They created TypeScript, and maintain it now. It's not exactly a business for them, no one is buying "TypeScript Enterprise" subscriptions. It's all under the Apache License 2.0 and certainly big enough that if they started pulling anything untoward, it would see a fork. Sometimes Microsoft produces an unalloyed good, they're not a monolith.

• SinkingRock 9 hours ago

And VS Code, and Github...

• tosti 9 hours ago

Soooo... Not anything we couldn't miss.

• mrob 6 hours ago

>This is not coming to the Linux world. The moment this sort of thing happens, distros get forked.

I installed Debian 13 recently. The first time I opened Firefox ESR (installed by default), I got something that looked like adverts on the home page (banner blindness means I have no memory of what they actually were, only of the feeling of disgust). The Home section of the Settings page had options for "Sponsored shortcuts" and "Sponsored stories" enabled by default. Changing a default setting is a lot easier than forking software, yet it was not done.

• necovek 10 hours ago

As long as you have a computer that can run unsigned software, or software signed by yourself, this won't come to Linux as non-optional features: you can always recompile your kernel removing things you do not want like this.

• tosti 9 hours ago

And before anyone goes "but I can't patch that!", all it takes is one clever guy to write the patch.

This is also why the bazaar model of Linux distributions is beneficial. You get more choice.

• numpad0 9 hours ago

Ubuntu snap

• drnick1 6 hours ago

Just use Debian. It's just as easy to install and use nowadays, and does not come with bloatware/malware.

• ErroneousBosh 4 hours ago

Neither does Ubuntu.

• NopIdoN 3 hours ago

snaps auto-update

• ErroneousBosh an hour ago

Yes, and?

• NopIdoN 14 minutes ago

and "minimal" install is like 12GB

• kstrauser 8 hours ago

It hasn’t come for the much larger Mac world yet.

I think literally the only driver I’ve installed for any accessory of any kind is the config utility for a Stream Deck. I certainly never install mouse (thank you Steermouse!) or printer drivers, let alone a monitor driver of all things.

• treyd 9 hours ago

> don't fool yourself if you think this won't come to the Linux world.

I'm curious what you mean by this. I'm not necessarily rejecting the point, but I also don't see how this could happen without substantial shifts in the industry first.

• evilduck 7 hours ago

Yeah, curious here too. Torvalds would need to pass first I think, and I just don't see other major players like RedHat, Google, Canonical, or Valve introducing this themselves or agreeing to do it in aggregate. And as end users we could still fork and patch it out. Some shitty company might try but I don't think it would stand.

• mixmastamyk 6 hours ago

Lots of bad ideas have come to Linux, like non-consensual telemetry, mobile-first interfaces etc. Don’t believe? Run OpenSnitch.

Traditional CADT means features get lost over time.

It is not immune from these forces, just not a focus by the powers that be. Fewer developers remember the good old days of Y2Kas as well, meaning they don’t resist these forces instinctively, since they grew up in iOS captivity.

• hparadiz 3 hours ago

Telemetry is anything including a process list. If you're talking about eBPF it's also used for debugging and server fleets and recently in basic task managers. Any data can be used to take a magnifying glass to the system. The kernel has literally thousands of toggles for this from networking to threading. And yes a program can see what your kernel supports and yes it can refuse to run if you're not running a specific kernel with a specific feature. How do you think programs like open snitch even work?

https://github.com/evilsocket/opensnitch/wiki/monitor-method...

• joe_mamba 11 hours ago

>I don't know what Microsoft is thinking even allowing and enabling this sort of thing

This has been a feature since Windows 7, and it worked great since it would pull all necessary drivers after installation without you going hunting on the internet like in the Windows XP days.

Just that no HW manufacturer thought to push spyware in their driver repos at that point to improve some team's KPIs.

• coldtea 10 hours ago

>and it worked great since it would pull all necessary drivers after installation without you going hunting on the internet like in the Windows XP days.

A driver shouldn't be a front-facing program that shows ads of any kind. It should be sandboxed and follow strict APIs to talk to the OS and that's it - any extra options should be shown inline in the main e.g. printer or mouse dialog.

• threetonesun 10 hours ago

And then what, ever single gaming mouse/keyboard config is going to appear in the Windows UI dialog? I think extra options in an app is fine, but you should have to download it. At which point who knows what you’ve opened yourself to but at least you chose to do it.

• VorpalWay 9 hours ago

> And then what, ever single gaming mouse/keyboard config is going to appear in the Windows UI dialog?

Actually, why not? The driver could declare a list/tree of extra configurable options, and windows could generate a configuration dialog for them. I think this is already is thing in Windows for NICs, I remember seeing TCP offload options when I go into properties for a NIC in the device manager.

You just need to make it a bit more accessible to non-tech users and with more modern control options such as colour wheels for RGB.

And the Linux software for these sort of devices (when such software exist) don't tend to be as bloated. Usually the driver just exposes some control files under /sys and someone else builds a GUI or such on top. But there is no reason you couldn't also expose a schema that describes what the options do to make a more generic GUI for those.

• threetonesun 7 hours ago

As a user I agree, but I think this misunderstands the Windows market. Forget about mice for a second, if you look at GPU drivers between Linux and Windows on Linux they... just work, and you can use some apps to modify exposed features, like you said.

On Windows out of the box they kind of work, but you really need a manufacturer's software suite to take full advantage of them, and that software suite is, surprise, an advertising and analytics platform, a situation I think both Microsoft and the peripheral manufacturers are very happy with.

• coldtea 4 hours ago

>On Windows out of the box they kind of work, but you really need a manufacturer's software suite to take full advantage of them, and that software suite is, surprise, an advertising and analytics platform, a situation I think both Microsoft and the peripheral manufacturers are very happy with.

What we're saying is this shouldn't be allowed by the OS to begin with. Not to merely use the peripheral in any case.

Whether Microsoft is happy with allowing it, is another matter.

Perhaps some law accompanied with hefty fines can make them less happy doing it.

• isityettime 8 hours ago

Configurable peripherals should store their configurations entirely on-board, and they should be configurable using a well-understood protocol. Users can then use either the vendor's application, a common third-party application, or the configuration interface native to their desktop environment to configure them. When they plug them into a new machine, they should just keep working without having to install any configuration software.

Many generations of Roccat peripherals were usable this way on Linux, thanks to the work of one generous volunteer who reverse-engineered them.

Companies like Logitech don't store their devices' configs in firmware in a way that "forces" you to run some additional shit to use all of their features (some features aren't implemented in software). It's a convenient excuse that allows them to push their spyware onto users, but it's totally unnecessary.

A vendor that was actually "user friendly" in the deep sense (opposite of "user hostile") would do this themselves; configuration would be upstream-first via libratbagd or whatever, and then they'd provide their own configuration interface as a value-add for a uniform cross-platform experience, or in areas where they thought they could provide a better UI than the design principles of KDE and GNOME, or so that they could have a uniform interface to refer to in their documentation.

• coldtea 4 hours ago

>And then what, ever single gaming mouse/keyboard config is going to appear in the Windows UI dialog?

Yes. Via some standard protocol to show checkboxes, radio buttons, drop down selections, etc.

• LucasOe 8 hours ago

Drivers should just make my stuff work. If I want to configure my hardware, I download the app from the manufacturer's website.

• solarkraft 9 hours ago

Yes! Extra apps suck.

• michaelmrose 9 hours ago

Linux users think of a driver as the thing that makes my silently hardware do the existing things its supposed to do like every other item in its class.

Windows users think of the driver as what makes the hardware do what everything in its class does but subtly different and somehow glued to a command center with its own unique and bad GUI auto started, in the tray, with its own update schedule, and ads.

• MatejKafka 9 hours ago

How exactly do you propose to sandbox drivers running in kernel space? Do you even know how drivers work? (I'm guessing no, based on this comment)

• masfuerte 8 hours ago

The User-Mode Driver Framework is a thing. Most plug-in devices do not need (or have) a kernel-mode driver.

• MatejKafka 8 hours ago

Yes, but unless all 3rd party drivers can run in userspace (which is not really feasible), Microsoft needs to give vendors the option to install a kernel driver, at which point a vendor can always decide to ship a kernel driver and bypass any restrictions.

Imo, the only thing Microsoft can meaningfully do here from their side is threaten LG with pulling all their drivers if they keep doing this.

• dwattttt an hour ago

Drivers still need to pass certification & get signed. Microsoft does get to reject them.

I can't imagine the group doing this validation is sufficiently manned/funded; it's a cost centre, and the effects of cutting it don't show up for years.

• milesvp 8 hours ago

There are people working on this problem honestly. The general solution 10 years ago was a micro kernel. Today, I’m not sure. The linux model is starting to look dated, with similar problems elsewhere. Modern hardware design looks less and less like classic textbook design, with all kinds of random chips having direct memory access to memory the cpu uses on some shared bus. Where even things like on board blue tooth chips can become attack vectors on the system.

There was a good keynote on the topic 5 years ago By Timothy Roscoe

https://www.usenix.org/conference/osdi21/presentation/fri-ke...

• MatejKafka 7 hours ago

Agree with all of those points and there are some partial solutions (IOMMU, userspace drivers, virtualization,...), but we're still quite far from being able to safely connect untrusted hardware and load its driver without effectively giving it privileged access.

• toast0 7 hours ago

Microsoft has a program to do static and dynamic analysis of drivers... not a sandbox, but better than nothing. Of course, wonky drivers plus wonky hardware can still do bad things (io-mmu can help, a bit).

The problems tend to be in the userspace software that's also installed with the driver. Sometimes there's also some pretty derpy stuff where the driver wants to talk to the userspace software but there's no validation/verification and that opens up a big hole.

• coldtea 4 hours ago

First of all, drivers don't have to run in kernel space. Do you know that? I'm guessing no, based on your comment.

Second, we're not talking about the drivers per se, as those aren't what shows you ads, it's the configuration software and accompanying crapware. Did you get that? I'm guessing no, based on your comment.

Third, there are capability-based kernels, microkernels, drivers that are allowed into as restricted bytecode, IOMMU, and several other layers of security. Do you know that? I'm guessing no, based on your comment.

• Dylan16807 4 hours ago

You don't have to counterbalance every useful sentence with a toxic message.

• coldtea 3 hours ago

You do, when you're responding to "Do you even know how drivers work? (I'm guessing no, based on this comment)". I'm merely giving them back their toxic comment right back.

• Dylan16807 2 hours ago

I'm not sure how I missed they did it first, but doing it more isn't really helping. Oh well, I shouldn't have said anything, it's not great but it's not worth fussing about.

Though there is a limit to how much you can effectively sandbox a driver for most devices. They do have a point even if they made it badly. I know you listed some methods but they don't generalize to arbitrary devices very well.

• MatejKafka 4 hours ago

Read sibling comments to get answers to all your (non)questions.

• coldtea 3 hours ago

Strange how you didn't read them then, based on your rude and false response to my comment.

• marcosdumay 8 hours ago

> Just that no HW manufacturer thought to push spyware in their driver repos at that point to improve some team's KPIs.

Except for every printer, some popular GPUs, Microsoft's peripherals...

• wat10000 10 hours ago

Auto-run when inserting a CD worked great, until people realized you could do bad stuff with it. User action must be required to run or install new software.

• jayd16 6 hours ago

OK so you get a pop-up that says "install driver or it won't work" and so you do and then you're at the same situation.

• wat10000 2 hours ago

Or you don’t and you return this piece of garbage for a refund. I hope you can see how this is much superior to auto-installing malware.

• Findecanor 11 hours ago

A few years ago, plugging in a Razer USB mouse made Windows download and run a installer from which the current user could start PowerShell with administrator privileges. Razer first tried to downplay the issue, but fixed it later. [1]

The USB protocol does not have any authentication, just a VendorID/ProductID pair: 2×16 bits that Windows uses for looking up the driver package to install. Programming a MCU to use any VendorID/ProductID is straightforward. A USB device could even appear innocuous at first but after a timer or external trigger disconnect and reconnect masquerading as another device.

1. https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2021/08/need-...

• globalnode 10 hours ago

not a usb programmer, but are you saying i can buy any old usb chip and program it with any vendors ID and spoof windows into giving me admin? if so, gj micrcosoft.

• Findecanor 9 hours ago

You could use any programmable microcontroller with a USB interface. Consumer products tend to have fuses set to they can't be programmed again.

The latest driver registered with Microsoft for the product you're going to spoof would need to have a vulnerability to exploit. You can't supply any driver.

• globalnode 8 hours ago

ok thanks, so its not as bad as i thought.

• nottorp 9 hours ago

You can pretend to be any vid:pid with usb gadget mode. For example with a raspberry pi zero something.

But you can't pretend to be any vendors id, only the ones with vulnerabilities. And the drivers or spyware will be downloaded by windows from the vendor's site, not from your peripheral.

But yes, usb device identifier is done through software/firmware.

• ssl-3 an hour ago

Oh, it's worse than that.

A USB attack-widget isn't limited to just one VID:PID pair. It can present itself as as hub with as many VID:PIDs behind it as is useful. (This isn't new or exotic functionality; the very first USB thumb drive I ever owned did this as a built-in, maybe 20 years ago.)

So, for instance: A single physical widget can present as a thing that makes Windows install vulnerable software, and as a keyboard that issues commands hook that vulnerability, and as a storage device that provides a payload, while also [or ultimately] appearing as the fully-functional device that the user actually intended to use.

Game over.

The end-user might see a brief flurry of stuff happening while this goes on, but that's no big deal: End-users are already accustomed to seeing that kind of thing when new hardware is introduced, and clicking whatever button it is that they're required to click in order to proceed.

• mrob 6 hours ago

You can also spoof a keyboard and simulate keystrokes to open terminals and run arbitrary commands. I don't know about Windows, but on Linux it's possible to block USB connections by default and filter them in userspace:

https://usbguard.github.io/

This allows enforcing rules like "never add an additional keyboard". But the USB protocol has no support for strong device authentication, so there's no way to prevent a device from acting like a malicious version of something in the device class you expected it to be without abandoning "plug and play" altogether (a reasonable solution in secure environments where unused ports are often physically blocked).

• mcv an hour ago

I've heard so before: that USB is a massive security hole. At least in Windows; I don't know if other OSs are also vulnerable.

Better to just never stick strange USB sticks in your computer.

• MatejKafka 9 hours ago

You can "spoof" any system where you can load older drivers into giving you admin/root, you just need to find a vulnerable driver. Nothing Windows-specific in that.

• tosti 8 hours ago

Also, disabling drivers from windows update is enforceable with group policy (iirc).

The BSDs have config, Linux can run without module support.

• Someone 8 hours ago

> This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

- https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/hardware/drivers...: “Windows can automatically download recommended drivers for the hardware and devices connected to a system by using Windows Update“

- eight years ago: https://www.reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/8tlre3/why_is_it...: “I can't seem to stop it from installing device drivers, even after unchecking the 'Do you want to automatically download manufacturers' apps and custom icons available for your devices?' and saving.

I uncheck it, reboot. Uninstall all drivers except USB (so I can use mouse and keyboard) and reboot. Aproximately two minutes after the reboot, I get notification ballons telling me everything is installed again. Heck, even the super old Nvidia 388.1 driver is installed (the latest now is 393.2).”

• sigio 12 hours ago

I can only conclude that Windows is basically malware now... Thank $deity I haven't used any form of Windows for 10+ years anymore.

• bunderbunder 10 hours ago

“Now”?

This is nothing new. For about 30 years now Microsoft has been constantly repeating various flavors of this “make it so a thing can automatically and silently run programs as soon as it touches your computer” thing. It’s always done in the name of user convenience. It always ends up being a fiasco. I don’t know why they keep doing it, it’s not like the exact same PHB keeps making the same decision over and over for 30 years. It’s probably one or a combination of the many well documented flavors of stupid that are deeply baked into the company’s organizational culture.

(And before the inevitable response, no this is not defending Microsoft. Pointing out that an organization’s culture is too deeply, chronically stupid to avoid opening the exact same obvious and gaping security hole over and over and over and over again is not the same as saying, “it’s fine, actually.”)

• ryandrake 8 hours ago

> It’s probably one or a combination of the many well documented flavors of stupid that are deeply baked into the company’s organizational culture.

It all comes from the increasingly widely held idea that the user should not be the ultimate authority over what should run on his computer. The OS vendor should have a say. Third party developers should have a say. Device manufacturers should have a say. Anyone except the user, who is just a passenger on his own system. And this mentality is not limited to Microsoft.

• RetroTechie 10 hours ago

> I can only conclude that Windows is basically malware now...

Windows has worked like spyware since what, the late Windows 7 days or thereabout?

End users should not regard this as inevitable. Or get caught up in the how-it-works-how-to-disable swamp. Instead, cut through to the essence. It's about respect:

# Microsoft does not respect Windows users (or users of any of their offerings?).

# LG does not respect people who buy their monitors (and perhaps other products?).

Knowing that, why would you use such a sleazy company's product for daily driving? Or give them your money? Would you buy bread from a baker who pisses on your lawn every time you're not looking?

User rights or consumer protection laws aren't even part of this equation. Although they do help (sometimes a lot!) to keep companies honest.

• flaunf221 10 hours ago

> why would you use such a sleazy company's product for daily driving

Because alternatives are much worse or not available for scenarios people need.

There, I've said the obvious.

• ezst 9 hours ago

That may sound obvious to you, but it's not for many, and this opinion of yours is shared by fewer and fewer people.

• flaunf221 7 hours ago

Some things not having viable alternatives on MacOS/Linux/BSD/whatever-else is not an opinion of mine. It's just life.

• ezst 5 hours ago

I didn't mean that you were nonfactual, only that you overgeneralise.

• tosti 8 hours ago

It should be a choice. They were or nearly were convicted for being a monopoly. For most users, they're not even aware there's a hardware/software distiction.

MS-Windows GUI has cashed on this unawareness since 95. "My Computer", "The computer needs to restart"... Being deliberately incorrect to add to the existing confusion.

• fooker 10 hours ago

You're missing out on 37 different unrelated things being named copilot.

• robin_reala 10 hours ago
• dansquizsoft 10 hours ago

Copilot’s T&Cs clearly explain that it is for entertainment purposes only though.

• marcosdumay 8 hours ago

Does that mean I can complain about anybody that creates an excel spreadsheet at work for violating the T&C?

• actionfromafar 10 hours ago

Like Fox News

• MatejKafka 9 hours ago

How it it a Windows issue that driver developers pack garbage with their drivers? If Linux supported loading 3rd party drivers (it mostly doesn't, and if Windows did that, the whole internet would be up in arms about Microsoft locking down their OS), it would have exactly the same issues.

This is basically the same as downloading a program, running it and when it downloads garbage on your computer, complaining that Windows are dumb for allowing a program to download garbage.

• toast0 7 hours ago

> How it it a Windows issue that driver developers pack garbage with their drivers?

Because windows update automatically installs the garbage when the device is connected.

Microsoft could control the content of the software it automatically installs, but they don't. That's the issue.

• bcraven 11 hours ago

This is one of those typical HN replies that adds absolutely nothing to the discussion.

• Geezus_42 11 hours ago

Much like your own, and this one!

• phikappa 10 hours ago

I wonder if this ritual of meta-self-policing serves some particular purpose or if it's just a case of the brain drawing comfort from going through a familiar ritual. "This comment adds nothing" is like the reverse amen in church of our days.

• warshinder 9 hours ago

Another example of context collapse. Meta-meta commenting always adds something if only unironically.

• pseudalopex 9 hours ago

The purpose was to discourage comments which added nothing I thought.

• stavros 6 hours ago

The GP comment adds social pressure so useless comments are less likely to be made.

• coldtea 10 hours ago

It's a discussion, it's not a panel to further scientific inquiry. Sentiments and opinions also further a discussion.

• exe34 10 hours ago

It confirms for me that I too made the right choice and it reminds people that haven't made the jump yet that they have a choice in how their operating system treats them. I'd say it added a lot more than your comment.

• internet2000 8 hours ago

> This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

You got a lot of replies already, but there's so much precedent. Plugging a Logitech mouse installs a network capable, autolaunch capable, pop up app for at least the past 10 years. LG's thing seems grodier, but this has been common Windows-ism for a while.

• fuzzfactor 8 hours ago

Plus even when the Logitech mouse has been moved to a different PC, the former PC will continue to get Logitech updates anyway.

Apparently so they will be one step ahead of you in case you decide to plug it in again sometime.

Graphics cards can do this too, you remove the card and go back to the motherboard's built-in HDMI port, then one day here comes a big update for the non-existent graphics adapter.

• dathinab 9 hours ago

> This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

depending on how you look at it it has quite a bit of precedence as this falls under a long list of MS shipping "intended behavior most security researcher would assign a CVE and require it to be fixed as min. requirement for Windows usage in any company"

other wtf. microslop cases include:

- "install arbitrary software w. admin rights hooks" in BIOS which theoretically is there to install BIOS update software but there had been cases of 1. it installing other unwanted software, 2. the updater not fulfilling most minimal security standards (i.e. similar, due to 2. maybe even worse then the monitor case)

- "on boot without password requirement boot arbitrary stuff from a USB stick if correctly named" allowing a trivial bypass of TPM based full disk encryption, yes different thing but another "MS without authentication runs potentially harmful 3rd party software"

- "init scripts on USB devices", I think they stopped doing that

- ...

given that Microsofts security researchers are definitely _not_ incompetent idiots, you can safely assume that all of this features where implemented knowing what user hostile hazards they are and against their own security teams recommendations (or bypassing that team knowing they would say "wtf. no", or similar)

most absurdly MS has in all of this cases enough means to enforce a "just drivers no ad-ware/spy-ware or you get banned" policy, and could do it in a way where they still allow non-allow-listed/ban-listed hooks to be run iff the user consented to it with appropriate warnings and "remember this decision" functionality in case they say no (which besides other aspects might be relevant from a "not steeping onto anti-trust landmines" POV, through mostly older judgements as the US kinda moved from hindering oligopoly to pushing for it).

combine that with the huge f*-up of Azure in the past and their systematic mishandling of it, and no indication they will change this behavior, I really don't understand how any Company/Government agency could trust them

• Sharlin 11 hours ago

Perhaps no precedent in hardware, but it's basically the same as the good old Sony CD autoplay rootkit fiasco. Except this one runs in mere userland AFAICS.

• halJordan 10 hours ago

Unprecedented? Have you installed a Dell/Alienware monitor recently? I hope you enjoy having the unsigned awcc.exe autostarting with no visible ui doing good knows what with no documentation from Dell

• jms703 4 hours ago

Yeah, I was looking for this comment. Dell/Alienware have been doing this for YEARS. Part of the many reasons I moved from Window to Linux.

• mcv an hour ago

Is Linux certain to be safe from this sort of thing? I used to use lots of Dell monitors.

Are there any brands that are known not to do anything like this? I'd like to reward them with my patronage.

• vanc_cefepime 44 minutes ago

I would like to know too. I purchased a OLED Alienware monitor back in 2022 when they first came out. Ive had a Linux/Windows dual-boot system but around 2023-24 I erased my Windows partition.

My uneducated guess is that it would be pretty difficult for something like this to autoinstall on linux without your permission. They can "recommend" you to install their app, but just plugging it and getting adware/malware, I hope it would be difficult.

Unlikely for any brand out there not to do this. Samsung will do it eventually if backlash isn't bad with this one with Alienware/Dell/LG. Maybe Benq, viewsonic, monoprice? I dont trust Asus not to do it either.

I have a LG TV and never connect it to Wifi. Never did I think just plugging in a HDMI cable would do this.

• miki123211 7 hours ago

8. ANd this isn't specific to LG. If LG can do it, anyone can, even if they aren't right now.

Buying from companies you trust isn't a solution either. Founders sometimes get into fatal car accidents or lose some of their assets in messy divorces. THe new owners may not care about "brand reputation" and sell the company to the highest bidder.

• xahrepap 8 hours ago

I have a windows computer that tries to install HP Printer software automatically because it detects an HP printer on the WiFi. No physical access needed

• wnevets 5 hours ago

> OR ALREADY HAD AN OLDER LG MONITOR PLUGGED IN, BECAUSE LG APPARENTLY ROLLED THIS OUT FOR MANY OLDER MODELS TOO!!

Just think about how many times hardware manufactures told customers to buy new equipment because they can't be bothered to patch the older models.

• Kelteseth 12 hours ago

It is the same when you plug in a Logitech mouse nowadays, no? At least they don't install McAfee

• vladvasiliu 11 hours ago

I have a logitech mouse and I'm pretty sure I was asked whether to install the logitech app, it didn't do it automatically. Same for the dell mouse I have at work, it asked to install dell somethingorother, which I declined, and it left me alone.

• d_k_f 11 hours ago

Anecdata from two days ago, after installing a fresh Windows 10: after inserting the dongle, a definitely non-native (styled by Logitech) popup asks me whether I want to install their app. I decline. One reboot later, the app is available in the start menu.

Edit: To be fair, I immediately uninstalled it, so I don't know if this was "just" a link to their installer app or the full app. But something definitely got downloaded and moved to a place I could not have moved it myself without accepting a UAC prompt m

• vladvasiliu 7 hours ago

Yeah, the questions showed up in non-native dialogues in both cases. I installed the Logitech one, but not the Dell. But then again, even freaking Office looks non-native on Windows, so I don't really pay attention to this aspect.

• coldtea 10 hours ago

And people think macOS sandboxing is "hyperbolic"

• TacticalCoder 39 minutes ago

> 1. Your OS installs malware ...

Your OS is malware.

We're talking about Windows here.

• theamk 4 hours ago

That's just living in the Windows world.

After start menu ads, I don't understand why people are being surprised anymore.

• chrisjj 42 minutes ago

> Your OS installs malware

Malware??

• jakzurr 7 hours ago

Thanks - really got my attention. And, the video makes me sick.

I'm still looking at my 10 year-old LG monitor with suspicion, now, but I'm thinking (hoping) it's just too old...

• stockmarketer 8 hours ago

>This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

I want to believe you, but somehow I can't, I feel like our industry has already mastered the art of installing malware on customers' devices.

• herbst 10 hours ago

As if the world needs more reasons to understand that windows is activly making your life worse. Step by step.

• orblivion 8 hours ago

Thank you for the summary. As a Linux user, am I spared because of relative obscurity, or is it that Microsoft is explicitly allowing this to happen?

• preisschild 6 hours ago

Linux only auto-loads the drivers in the kernel tree

• tomaskafka 4 hours ago

I understand shitty brands want to do this.

The bit I don’t understand is Microsoft making an infrastructure that allows this, lets shine the shame light here.

• theamk 4 hours ago

Have you installed Windows recently? It is full of ads.

If Microsoft can push ads to users, why can't LG?

• sixothree 2 hours ago

If this were a person doing this, they would be in jail.

• mcv an hour ago

Companies consist of people.

• greggsy 5 hours ago

Logitech have been doing this for years

• formerly_proven 8 hours ago

> This situation has.. no precedent as far as I can tell..

No, this has been going on for years. Vendors have been pushing malicious software through the Windows Update automatic driver installation since forever. MSI and Nahimic/A-Volute (this has watchdog daemon to instantly reinstall it as well as the main app protecting the daemon), the ASUS Armory Crate bullshit, the Lenovo garbage, which initially they only put into their own images, but then started force-installing via Windows Update, Gigabyte, ... the list is really long.

If you have to use Windows, you really absolutely should disable driver installation through Windows Update.

• bravo777 8 hours ago

Have you been using Gentoo or FreeBSD for a long time and then suddenly remembered Windows exists on the same day this news dropped?

• DrJaws 9 hours ago

this has happened to me with dell monitors since years ago, also with razer peripherals.

• phendrenad2 8 hours ago

I'm tired of everything being classified as "malware". The word has no meaning anymore. Malware can mean "zero-day state-sponsored ransomware attack" or it can mean "software was automatically installed by a trusted consumer-beloved company because they forgot to make an opt-out window" (which is what I'm guessing happened here).

• IshKebab 11 hours ago

USB devices can also do this now. I have a Razor microphone which is otherwise a great device and requires no software to function. At soon as you plug it in to windows it tries to install some Razor crapware.

It's not quite as bad because it's not silent and you can say no, but I'm pretty sure that's only because Razor decided not to be completely evil.

• beAbU 10 hours ago

Logitech pulls (pulled?) the same shit when you connect one of their pheriferals to your PC.

• hulitu 3 hours ago

But thanks to Secure Boot, your computer is secure. /s

When will people understand that malware is signed by the vendor ?

• silverlimetea 10 hours ago

Buddy let me welcome you to the Internet where your phones and emails are literally listening to your microphone like it’s Watergate.

It’s not unprecedented at all for Microsoft or anyone to download what amounts to spyware.

The days of antivirus were replaced by advertising a long time ago. There is no privacy.

Most savvy types are hyper aware of every process running on their machine especially those using network lol

Kill the process or don’t by an LG. Everyone just uses Dell, or you’re rich and you get a Mac one. I don’t make the rules

• brynnbee 9 hours ago

Savvy types use Linux

• ikidd 9 hours ago

I've gotten to the point that if you're trying to show me something and I see you're using Windows, I just assume you're an unserious person and it's worthless.

All the major tools for advanced work are Linux-based, and there's maybe a Windows version, but it's probably a kludge like Docker Desktop.

• delta_p_delta_x 9 hours ago

> All the major tools for advanced work are Linux-based

No, they aren't. Linux hasn't yet got anything remotely close to PDB symbol servers and WinDbg's record-replay debugging. perf is... an attempt.

Source: worked on Windows and Linux drivers and user-mode applications. Windows tooling blows the competition out of the water in actually advanced developer experience. Vim is cool to the ricing hackerman types but not people who actually earn salaries. Windows doesn't need Docker because it has a stable user-mode ABI.

• warshinder 8 hours ago

I know you’re joking, but there is a very small sliver of truth in there somewhere. There are some tools on windows that stand shoulder to shoulder with better os’s.

• silverlimetea 8 hours ago

> people who actually earn salaries

Maybe a hot take but the world's "most advanced software engineering" is not happening in W-2 employment scenarios.

• theamk 3 hours ago

advanced work != advanced tools

You can have basic and not very user friendly tool, and work on very advanced topics, such as new forms of networking, innovative database, cool filesystem or storage devices, etc...

Or you can be an advanced windows developer with very nice tools, and yet work on something utterly mundane, like an internal app which tracks time off in your company, schedules delivery of parts, or provides a (granted, very nice and polished) UI to the backend database server which runs Linux.

In my experience, most of the advanced work is done on Linux nowadays. Just look at HN front page - how many posts are Windows-only and are not "new UI over existing library/service"?

• delta_p_delta_x 3 hours ago

Windows does plenty of 'advanced work'. Almost all video games are written primarily on and for Windows.

> In my experience, most of the advanced work is done on Linux nowadays

That's because your experience probably hasn't ever included work on Windows internals. Take it from someone who has—the complexity and 'advancedness' of the stuff running on Windows is at least equal to that of Linux or any other OS. The fact that Windows can so thoroughly abstract the computer away from the user is in itself a massive feat that few other OSs have really managed.

> Just look at HN front page - how many posts are Windows-only

The overwhelming majority of posts on the HN front page are now LLM slop or web development. I seriously dislike this insinuation that work done on Windows is, as the grandparent claims, 'unserious' or less advanced.

• delta_p_delta_x 12 hours ago

Workaround:

  gpedit.msc
  Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > System > Device Installation
  Prevent automatic download of applications associated with device metadata
  Set to enabled
  OK
On home editions sans gpedit.msc:

  sysdm.cpl
  Hardware tab
  Click Device Installation Settings
  Under 'Do you want to automatically download manufacturers' apps for your devices?', select 'No'
  Save Changes
• Someone1234 12 hours ago

Worth noting that gpedit.msc isn't included in Windows Home editions (although there are unsupported ways of adding it). This is also technically asking a lot for working around issues that shouldn't exist.

Microsoft needs to intervene here, this cannot be a normal expectation for using their product.

• yonatan8070 9 hours ago

> Microsoft needs to intervene here

Yeah, they've never pushed ads or installed software without the user's consent.

• AlienRobot 11 hours ago

Me on Windows 7: I don't want to use Linux, you have to keep configuring every single thing so it works.

Me on Linux: I don't want to use Windows, you have to keep configuring every single thing so it doesn't show ads.

• VorpalWay 9 hours ago

Linux usability has come a long way in recent years. I switched full time to Linux in 2006, but I can absolutely understand those who wouldn't back then.

These days? Unless there is a specific piece of software that can't run on Linux (or under Wine), and there is no suitable replacement for it? Yeah I don't know why you would voluntarily stay on Windows (note voluntarily, if IT policy says you must that doesn't count).

• miki123211 7 hours ago

Accessibility.

All accessibility stacks sucks in some respect, but Linux's sucks most of all, and Wayland people in particular don't seem to be willing to compromise on security (which is required for accessibility to work).

• ThatMedicIsASpy an hour ago

Touch goes in there as well. I don't know how they add a new touch keyboard to KDE and have no access to arrow keys. Making it impossible to go up in the terminal.

https://i.imgur.com/nOgLqHU.png

• VorpalWay 36 minutes ago

Oof, please report that as an issue (if it hasn't been done already). KDE uses https://bugs.kde.org

• drnick1 5 hours ago

QEMU is also a good option for Windows software that won't run on Wine. Unless you explicitly pass through a peripheral, Windows won't see it and start downloading malware in the backgroud.

• antisthenes 4 hours ago

Not to mention AI assistants are really good at helping you solve problems on Linux.

Yeah, I know, it's not the same as "knowing" a system when you just copy paste terminal output, but if it solves a problem and converts 1 more person to Linux from W - that's a win.

• MatejKafka 3 hours ago

Agents work well on Windows for sysadmin stuff - PowerShell gives them an easy way to interact with Registry, event log, WMI and other facilities in a structured way.

• driverdan 10 hours ago

Can you even disable all the ads on Windows 11?

• MatejKafka 3 hours ago

Yes, and it's still fairly easy.

• delta_p_delta_x 11 hours ago

Edited with another method.

• Someone1234 10 hours ago

That's great, thank you.

What's frustrating about that is that Microsoft has also gone out of their way to make it difficult to access the [legacy] System Properties (sysdm.cpl), while not fully reimplementing all the features into the Settings app. Including this one.

They've only been working on this 10+ years...

• efreak 3 hours ago

What's more frustrating than that is the inability to have more than one control panel open at a time. Have your post of issues software open and want to change display resolution real quick? Sorry, you've lost your place in the list. Security settings are a separate app, but it's even worse because it requires elevation _every time_ before it can reload the list of issues. You thought this executable was already bypassing whatever protection, so you elevate to open the list of exceptions...then lose your place in the log and have to elevate yet again to find out the details...and open each list item in turn because the main list doesn't provide enough details to know know which item you were looking at and there's no detailed view. But you still can't cross-reference against your list of exceptions and forgot to take a screenshot, so you have to start over.

• delta_p_delta_x 9 hours ago

*.cpl, *.msc, etc are Windows sysadmins' (and developers') bread and butter; Microsoft will never get rid of them. I am betting (maybe hoping...?) that Windows 12 will undo the changes in Windows 8, 10, and 11 as bad experiments and return to what Windows has done best, which is discoverable GUI configuration. Let's see.

• Someone1234 9 hours ago

You're much more "glass half full" than me, but one can dream.

• fuzzfactor 10 hours ago

Also found in the GUI:

  System > About > Advanced System Settings link > Hardware tab > Device installation settings
  Do you want to automatically download manufacturers' apps for your devices?
  set to No
The default setting has been "Yes" for a very long time but most monitors over the years have simply used the default plug-and-play Windows monitor driver instead of installing their own. Triggering no additional downloads for the life of most computers. It just so happens that monitor manufacturers better adhered to the Microsoft guidelines for hardware compatibility earlier and more adequately than most devices. This might very well have been a reliability tactic since graphics drivers were still quite a moving-target shitshow, which in some ways is still ongoing.

So people have mostly never gotten accustomed to monitor drivers having any consideration at all, while drivers for graphics themselves and other new hardware has often had some associated downloads that people have become familiar dealing with.

Looks like LG finally took this long-standing opportunity to do some deeper enshittification than previously imagined. Simply taking advantage of a domino effect that has been lurking for decades.

A couple other related gpedit options if you don't even want the drivers themselves to change after you have gotten them correctly installed:

  gpedit.msc
  Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > System > Internet Communication Management > Internet Communication settings
  Turn off Windows Update device driver searching
  Set to enabled
  OK
  
  gpedit.msc
  Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Windows Update > Manage updates offered from Windows Update > 
  Do not include drivers with Windows Update
  Set to enabled
  OK
• mrbluecoat 11 hours ago

Very helpful, thank you. But it does remind me of that Yzma quote in The Emperor's New Groove: "Why do we even have that lever?"

• delta_p_delta_x 10 hours ago

> Why do we even have that lever

For plug-and-play devices with multiple configuration knobs. It is nice to be able to click through a printer wizard to configure how one wants to print their documents. Likewise with an audio interface: loopback settings, codec, sampling rate, gain and volume of channels, etc. Or consider a USB CNC mill; configuring things like milling revolution rate, setting which bit is installed, what lubricant is used, etc. Or consider the Nvidia/AMD control panels for their GPUs; things like colour depth and space, resolution, scaling, anti-aliasing, vertical synch, power settings, etc.

Some of these settings are device- and even manufacturer-specific; one might argue these are more than a driver or the platform can or should provide. That being said, this stuff should go into a user-mode driver...

That LG have exploited this functionality to install adware is on them.

• nottorp 9 hours ago

> It is nice to be able to click

You said click. This happens without clicking anything.

• miki123211 7 hours ago

For audio interfaces, HDAudio lets you do most of this. What the extra software gives you instead is often some crappy DSP that increases latency and messes with sound quality.

For years, Dell's / Realtek's software had an unpaged memory leak somewhere. If you were using a screen reader (I guess they must interact with audio devices in some very specific way that Realtek hasn't accounted for), your system would eventually run out of RAM and BSOD. They didn't fix this until Microsoft and a few screen reader vendors intervened. "Don't buy Dell" was a standard recommendation in the blind community for years, which didn't help if you had a work PC with no local admin.

• Saris 10 hours ago

Oh definitely, it's more a question of why Microsoft allows any 'driver utility' to have internet access or do anything outside of just configuring the hardware.

• tremon 10 hours ago

> why Microsoft allows any 'driver utility' to have internet access

Firmware updates for devices are not a thing in your world?

• Saris 10 hours ago

It seems like windows update should handle distributing the verified new firmware file if it is also distributing the driver utility to avoid any issues like this post talks about.

• tremon 10 hours ago

That would be a good idea actually, but I'm not sure how viable that is within the current Windows Update instrumentation. Allowing local binaries to fetch random URLs through the Windows Update API is no different from them using the HTTP Service unless there's some kind of whitelisting/validation happening there. The alternative would be that Microsoft uses their own Windows Update cdn to host random firmware files that they're not able to verify themselves. Both cases sound like maintenance overhead for Microsoft without benefit to them.

• VorpalWay 9 hours ago

There is no reason we need a badly coded vendor control panel to install firmware upgrades though. On Linux https://fwupd.org/ is a database for vendor firmware, and you use one shared open source took to install upgrades for all devices attached to your system.

• Brian_K_White 7 hours ago

If there is a system where someone smashes through your wall to deliver you some food, and we ask "why do we even have this guy-smashes-through-wall system?", "So we can have dinner" does not answer that question.

• Grombobulous 10 hours ago

This is getting technical enough that you might as well install Linux if you figure out how to do this.

In other words, we all know that regular consumers will never find this and they’ll never understand that their LG software is spyware in the first place.

• fuzzfactor 9 hours ago

>regular consumers will never find this and they’ll never understand that their LG software is spyware in the first place.

Keep in mind the well-known quote from so many pages of Microsoft documentation over the decades, where the main useful function of a feature is the only one completely crippled in what's obviously got to be a complete engineering snafu:

"This is by design."

• rkourdis 9 hours ago

I had a mouse that would keep on installing its driver when plugged in, even with this setting off.

I remember Windows keeping a cache of autodownloaded drivers ("Driver Store") and reinstalling them when the device is plugged in, so the mouse bloatware kept on coming back.

Is this still the case?

• MaxL93 9 hours ago

You have to add keys under:

Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\DeviceInstall\Restrictions

The keys I have right now are all REG_SZ (strings), and in order of "1" through "5", are:

---

1. SWC\VEN_DELL&DEV_AWCC

2. SWC\VID_DELL&PID_AWCC

3. SWC\Alienware_Command_Center

4. SWC\AWCC

5. SWC\VID001&PID0001&AWCCWINUI3APP

---

Nothing short of this prevented "Alienware Command Center" (AWCC.exe) from pushing itself onto my machine because of my Alienware OLED monitor.

I should note it's possible to shoot yourself in the foot there; I had entries 6, 7, and 8 blocking SWC\Generic, SWD\GenericRaw, and SWD\Generic — and that prevented Audio Endpoints from being mounted...

• delta_p_delta_x 9 hours ago

You only need (5) (see the AWCCWINUI3APP thing there?). There is also a group policy equivalent to this:

  Computer Configuration\Administrative Templates\System\Device Installation\Device Installation Restrictions
  Prevent installation of devices that match any of these device IDs
  Set to Enabled
  Enable Also apply to matching devices that are already installed
  
Add the following two IDs:

  MONITOR\DELA246
  SWC\VID001&PID0001&AWCCWINUI3APP
IMO this is especially heinous as Dell have registered the AWCC.exe software component as a hardware 'device' within the device tree that needs its own 'driver'. Methinks Microsoft need to tighten the noose on these annoying OEMs.
• prmoustache 41 minutes ago

Yuck.

And people say linux is too complicated for normal people because of terminal commands*

*which in reality no user is really forced to use, it just happens to be easier to share and copy/paste a set of commands than hundreds of clicks on a screen.

• r1ch 9 hours ago

Even that isn't sufficient - I've been using this for years and every so often AWCC still manages to get through. The only 100% protection from it is to use Image File Execution Options to match on the installer name to prevent it from ever running.

• throw0101a 10 hours ago

> On home editions sans gpedit.msc:

I've managed to generally avoid running Windows (at home and at work) for a long time now, but if there was a situation where I needed to get a PC (at home?), is there a recommended least-sucky way of living with?

Are there editions or scripts or a setup workflow that would make it suck less?

• delta_p_delta_x 10 hours ago

Use autounattend.xml[1] to pre-configure an image before installation. This is what corporate sysadmins have done in the past three decades to administer Windows NT fleets. Use PowerShell and various admin modules to configure an online installation.

Then, to get a better version of Windows, use MAS[2].

[1]: https://schneegans.de/windows/unattend-generator/

[2]: https://massgrave.dev/

• MatejKafka 4 hours ago

Use Pro, Home is needlessly limiting for a power user.

• hamburglar 10 hours ago

To be frank, no. In order to make windows not suck, you must invest a lot of time into knowing what to disable on the various SKUs, and in my opinion, it stopped being worth it around the time of windows vista (2006-7ish). I worked for Microsoft back then and ever since I left in 2007 i have thankfully been able to have a no-windows policy. I did briefly try going back last year for Unity dev but it was a mistake that made me want to quit computers entirely.

• warshinder 8 hours ago

Don’t turn it on unless you need to print something.

• ImPostingOnHN 9 hours ago

Yes, Windows LTSC is an edition without as much crap.

Haven't used it lately (over 2 decades with linux as daily driver), so can't personally vouch for it.

• denkmoon an hour ago

The real workaround is to delete system32.

I had this shit with my alienware monitor. Doesn’t happen on Linux.

• Hizonner 9 hours ago

Superior workaround:

1. Reset machine 2. Tap the BIOS setup key (often DEL) during the time before it boots. 3. Insert intallation media for a decent OS 4. ...

• tialaramex 12 hours ago

Assuming they don't get a revenue cut, pushing back on Microsoft can in principle be effective here.

Microsoft decides what happens here, and presumably today they just take it on trust that hardware makers know what software to install. New driver? Sure. McSpam installer? OK. Maybe they have a guideline saying "Don't ship unrelated garbage" but today it's not enforced because why would you do that?

If the Microsoft customers (particularly larger corporate customers) tell Microsoft they hate this that policy will get tightened or if there isn't a policy one is introduced, and outfits like LG get told if you do this again we're taking away your update privileges, 'cos our customers hated this. Because (as I said assuming MS don't get a taste) this is all downside for Microsoft.

Pushing back on LG will be less likely to work because you already bought their product, so at most you can insist you'll forgo LG next iteration and they know such pledges evaporate in practice usually. Whereas Microsoft has contract negotiations every day, somewhere a $$$ contract is being renegotiated next week and if "Yeah, these LG popups suck" comes up - even if it's not a corporate system but the VP's niece's video editing suite for her vlog that's strictly unrelated - that Microsoft sales droid reports this was an impediment and it's on the list of things that don't benefit Microsoft.

• vladvasiliu 11 hours ago

The issue is that most corps disable Windows Update and only allow whatever goes through the on-prem Windows Update thingy. This can, of course, fire back if they don't think to include all the updates. We had one such issue where they didn't provide an up-to-date Intel driver for the Wi-Fi cards, and the version we had was a bit broken...

But the point is that companies will probably not complain about this because they'll most likely not see it. Also, they're used to Windows being generally crappy.

• stefan_ 9 hours ago

Ah, the usual take. Want to sign everything before it can run, but take responsibility for nothing. And when in doubt, well, the computer did it.

When do we start calling out this crap?

• ImPostingOnHN 9 hours ago

You'd get better results starting a conspiracy theory about it which took hold within right-wing circles, but it's less work to just not use it.

• raverbashing 12 hours ago

Honestly yeah

MS should get all the flack (which is mostly deserved) of this

Manufacturer does whatever crap they want with "it works" and then MS gets the complaints

A driver should only be that. A driver

• embedding-shape 11 hours ago

> MS should get all the flack (which is mostly deserved) of this

I don't see why we can't blame both here? And I'm a big LG user, I'm writing this comment via a LG monitor, our main TV is LG, dishwasher and clotheswasher is also LG. But still, that Microsofts enables this behavior should rightly put them at the stake for this, and also LG should get flack too, just because something is possible doesn't mean you have to automatically go that route.

• mcfedr 4 hours ago

well you can plug the same monitor into a mac and not have this issue.

• embedding-shape 3 hours ago

I don't use it with a Mac, and I already don't have that issue :) Kind of besides the point, LG should still get flack for it, even if it doesn't happen for me on the platform I use.

• raverbashing 5 hours ago

We can

I don't think "should" is the best word here, I mean it more like "They will (eventually)"

But what they should/are aware of (and work against) is shenanigans by the HW vendors

• rbanffy 12 hours ago

> A driver should only be that. A driver

I still remember the massive amounts of crapware installed with video cards, printers (hello, HP), and just about anything where the manufacturer can squeeze some money from.

• al_borland 11 hours ago

This was always one of my biggest pet peeves on Windows. A bunch of junk running in the system tray just for basic hardware functionality.

• mr_toad 10 hours ago

> A driver should only be that. A driver

What does a monitor even need a driver for? I presume if you plug one of these into a Mac or a Linux box it’s still going to function.

• gkbrk 11 hours ago

A monitor cannot install software on your computer by the way. It's Windows installing this software automatically (for some reason), so the blame should be on Microsoft.

Autorun of malware when you plugged in a USB drive was also a Windows issue, I'd classify this as the same security problem.

• felooboolooomba 9 hours ago

> A monitor cannot install software on your computer by the way.

I think everyone in the HN crowd knows that.

> the blame should be on Microsoft

No, they blame should ALSO be on Microsoft, they are the enablers.

• hx8 an hour ago

> I think everyone in the HN crowd knows that.

I actually did not. I know there is some degree of two-way communication over HDMI/DP, and was curious if this was how the software was installed. I think discussing the technical details is a great use of the HN comment section.

(Wifi enabled display device -> HDMI -> Device) would be an incredibly interesting attack vector.

• rsync 6 hours ago

“I think everyone in the HN crowd knows that.”

I would think everyone in the HN crowd would be aware of HEAC, the hdmi Ethernet channel, etc.

With full access to the hosts tcp/ip stack, we’d do well not to overlook the potential vectors for a monitor to install software on your computer… especially when the operating system is complicit.

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

Ok, I don't use Windows and never will, so wasn't aware of this feature, and it would've been nice to have that context. Thought maaybe LG is exploiting a vuln in Windows via USB-C or over one of the niche HDMI features, but gathered it's not that.

• MatejKafka 9 hours ago

> Autorun of malware when you plugged in a USB drive was also a Windows issue, I'd classify this as the same security problem.

Not really. AutoRun ran whatever was on the USB drive, with no oversight. This installs a driver from a company that's supposed to be reputable enough to get their driver signed by MS and pass validation. LG breached that trust here.

• chrisjj 37 minutes ago

> that's supposed to be reputable enough to get their driver signed by MS and pass validation. LG breached that trust here.

I think you overestimated how reputable is enough.

• chrisjj 38 minutes ago

So how is this malware?

• daveidol 10 hours ago

The blame should be on Microsoft and LG, both.

• Hizonner 9 hours ago

Actually it frequently can, since a modern monitor is often on USB and in a position to impersonate a keyboard and/or mouse.

I wouldn't put it past most of these companies.

• krige 9 hours ago

The monitor should absolutely take the major part of the blame by being the source of the malware and poisoning the system for everyone else.

• mcfedr 4 hours ago

its not the source though is it? its not like it's downloaded via the hdmi cable, it comes from Microsoft that offer the service of installing crap

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

Ironically if Microsoft responded by just never signing LG software again, but kept this auto-install thing in, LG monitors would become the best to use with Windows.

• tantalor 11 hours ago

Blame should be on the user for buying Windows

• mystifyingpoi 10 hours ago

Please do not blame the user.

• mosselman 11 hours ago

You are describing 'the blame should be on Windows'.

The consequence of Windows having the blame is that one should not buy it.

• grayhatter 10 hours ago

that's funny; because my root cause analysis didn't show the user as the person making the decision to show themselves ads? did yours, or was the victim blaming intentional?

• zajio1am 9 hours ago

Not making the specific decision (showing ads) but making the general decision (giving power to Microsoft). Blaming customers for buying MS products is not really much different than blaming Trump voters for voting for him. In both cases risks were obvious beforehand.

• k33n 10 hours ago

The word “victim” is honestly pretty funny in this context. Nothing really happened to anyone.

• gkbrk 10 hours ago

I wouldn't classify getting random malware as "nothing happening".

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

Because it spies on them and nags. But Windows itself already does that. LG could've done the same thing sans the mcafee popups and nobody would care, in fact Dell is probably doing that.

• ssl-3 43 minutes ago

> But Windows itself already does that.

So once an person is victimized in this way, it becomes a free-for-all where future transgressions cease to matter?

• OptionOfT 6 hours ago

Windows urgently needs to revamp their driver consent model.

You can't block a just one driver. E.g. for my touch screen on the Lenovo website there is version X. When I install it the next day Windows installs X-1.

On Lenovo's website the latest version is 7.7.2.66 (https://pcsupport.lenovo.com/us/en/products/laptops-and-netb...).

Windows reverts that to 7.7.2.44.

I tried blocking that update with the Powershell command-thingy, but even that doesn't work:

    Administrator in ~
    get-windowsupdate -isHidden | ft Status,KB,Size,Title

    Status  KB Size Title
    ------  -- ---- -----
    ----H--    92KB Wacom Technology - HIDClass - 7.7.2.44
(this command by the way takes 20+ seconds), and the filtering doesn't work because there is no KB.
• deathanatos 6 hours ago

Malware like this will continue until there is privacy laws that make it illegal.

The GN video focuses a lot on consent, and while maybe this is notionally currently illegal without consent, that just steers towards companies shipping a generic ToS popup, claiming you "read" that 1.8 PiB of ToS, and including the "oh btdubs we can modify these terms at any times and if you want to go to court lol forced arbitration has other ideas about that."

MS & Windows having conditioned users to expect / think they need drivers for peripherals speaking standard protocols is also part of this. A monitor shouldn't need a driver. It takes the pixels, it displays the pixels.

• sixothree an hour ago

I'm 100% certain if an individual did this, they would be in jail.

• GaProgMan 12 hours ago

Gamers Nexus have a video about this. Definitely worth a watch.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9uefFYe6bM

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

I'm wondering if we in Europe gets vastly different experience compared to Americans or elsewhere in the world. People complain about LG having ads everywhere in the monitors, displays and what not, but none of our LG products (bought and used in Spain) have any ads anywhere. I'm sitting here with a LG monitor and our main TV is a LG OLED TV, neither of them have ads anywhere, although I haven't booted Windows in a couple of days and I guess I won't, until this malware issue been fixed.

But still, is it possible Americans are receiving more ads than in other parts of the world? Certainly online sentiment gives me that impression.

• throwa356262 12 hours ago

In general, yes.

But in case of LG TVs, they record your activities in EU too. You can opt out, but the settings has a very non-descriptive name ("live plus") and resets by itself when you are not looking.

https://www.consumerreports.org/electronics/privacy/how-to-t...

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

Right, I'm wondering about the amount of ads though.

• throwa356262 12 hours ago

No, I think the ads are limited to own services and third party apps right now. Same goes for Samsung in EU.

• bloqs 12 hours ago

Same here in the UK

• 15155 12 hours ago

> Americans are receiving more ads than in other parts of the world

Ads aren't free, so yes, it would stand to reason that people in the largest consumer market in the world might garner more ad spend.

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

So because the US is the largest consumer market in the world, the TVs LG sell in the US has more ads in the UIs than TVs sold in Europe? Why would it be like that? If that theory is true, does that mean TVs sold in the European Union then have more ads than TVs sold in China, as the EU consumer market is larger than the China one?

• 15155 12 hours ago

> Why would it be like that?

Ads aren't free - this isn't a "theory," it's basic economics. Cost can be political (you cause the entire EU government to outlaw the practice) or monetary.

> If that theory is true, does that mean TVs sold in the European Union then have more ads than TVs sold in China

Probably? The markets have little overlap, but again, this is a function of cost. Where people have more money to spend, I have more money to spend on ads, or more money to spend on campaigning to be allowed to show ads.

• embedding-shape 11 hours ago

> Probably?

Spoiler: LG TVs sold in China also seem to have more ads than the LG TV we end up buying in Europe. Seemingly (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48957229) with Samsung it's the same. Even though EU is a larger consumer market than China, so obviously your theory doesn't hold, it's something else than "Bigger consumer markets === more ads in UIs in TVs".

• 15155 11 hours ago

> obviously your theory doesn't hold

Cost is my "theory." A larger market can sustain larger ad spend, and in some areas it's cheaper to make larger ad buys. Both are true.

Also, "larger market" obviously implies a category-specific qualifier. People in the United States might have more of an appetite for televisions than people without running water - news at 11.

> Spoiler: LG TVs sold in China also seem to have more ads than the LG TV we end up buying in Europe.

"Spoiler:" is an unnecessarily cunty way to lead a declaration of fact with zero objective accompanying evidence. Any citation you care to provide?

"More ads" is already a pretty subjective, ill-defined thing. More screen time? More individual advertisers? More unique advertisements? Larger screen area?

• embedding-shape 11 hours ago

> Any citation you care to provide?

Not really, the question I posed initially was a casual one, based on reading around basically. I'm guessing you then have a citation handy for the US LG TVs having more ads because the US is a bigger consumer market?

> "More ads" is already a pretty subjective, ill-defined thing. More screen time? More individual advertisers? More unique advertisements? Larger screen area?

If you open up the TV home dashboard, do you see ads? On my LG TV I don't, looking at screenshots from LG TVs in the US, there seems to be.

• thenthenthen 9 hours ago

Living in China, in my experience there are more ads than anywhere else I have been. My TV’s homescreen is just ads, every app has constant ads after each action there is basically a popup. There are even more ‘grey area’ ads, my whole scooter and door is plastered with the same ad for borrowing money, just different color and number, but literally 40 around my front door. On the rolling shutters of stores there are hundreds of stickers offering shutter maintenance services (lol). Its fairly insane, but the overload also makes it interesting

• jdw64 11 hours ago

Europe has strong GDPR regulations. As for China, I've heard that hardware margins are low, so the hardware itself is just bait, and they embed ads in the software inside. But this is just something I heard from another Korean programmer, so it's not really a serious claim

• dvdkon 10 hours ago

More spend doesn't equal more ads. Given a fixed number of ad spots, demand dictates the price advertisers would pay for ad placement. But ad platforms have no incentive to reduce the number of ads they show just because placement price is low; keeping ad spots around costs them nothing.

• InsideOutSanta 9 hours ago

The cost of ads already accounts for the audience. Ads in the US are more expensive, so the number of ads people see should be roughly the same despite higher ad spend.

• reaperducer 11 hours ago

You must be getting downvoted by people who have never run an ad-supported web site.

When I used to do that, North American traffic got ads 100% of the time. European traffic might get ads 5% of the time. Otherwise, there were few advertisers that cared.

However, this was back before Google AdSense upended the industry, and you could still make a living showing one static ad per page.

• 15155 10 hours ago

It's afternoon in Europe, and folks generally don't like to be reminded of the fact that their market is decreasing in global relevance.

In this case, ads are even a product people actively want to avoid, but it's still unsettling to be undesirable. Imagine banning smoking and then getting upset that Philip Morris doesn't want to sell to you anymore.

• Jtarii 5 hours ago

I don't think many Europeans are lamenting that companies are advertising to Americans more than them.

• motbus3 12 hours ago

I am tired of this. LG is now on my blacklist alongside EA and Blizzard Entertainment for their anti consumer practices. I can't change them, I can't change policies about it. I can choose to not buy.

• delusional 11 hours ago

> Blizzard Entertainment

You mean "Microsoft Xbox Activision Blizzard King Bethesda Mojang"? I wish you luck with your boycott.

• motbus3 8 hours ago

People do whatever they want with their money. I think their products little matter when they are not good people. (And they are not even good products, with some exceptions)

I can't control the world. But I can share my opinion on the matter . I think as long as we accept this poor behaviour companies will have more and more incentives to do it. And worse than that, they will also keep attacking the good folks

• BatteryMountain 11 hours ago

I've successfully avoided these companies the last 5 years. Gaming as a whole is dead for me, I just play a couple of old games now & then. The culture is toast too, not just bad games or expensive hardware. So not really losing much sleep over any of this. I have linux on all my machines, so I really only play the one's that perform well on linux. Haven't played online multiplayer games since ~2013. Many of us are like me.

edit: like if a game doesn't work, I no longer spend hours trying to fix it, I don't go ranting on the internet about it.. I just uninstall and play something else. Really simplifies things if you can detach from gaming as a core identity anchor.

• nottorp 9 hours ago

> Gaming as a whole is dead for me

There are millions of indies out there. Some are worth the time. It's a bit of a problem to figure out which though.

> Haven't played online multiplayer games since ~2013

I don't think there are any non predatory online multiplayer games since 2013 :)

And there are many online multiplayer games that would have been really good as single player.

• lloydatkinson 10 hours ago

I'm still angry at how they ruined Overwatch

• motbus3 8 hours ago

You mean how the stole the product you bought?

• lloydatkinson an hour ago

I suppose so?

• zargon 8 hours ago

There's not much worth playing coming from this group anyway.

• Hikikomori 10 hours ago

Not that hard, last game I played was WoW Classic, last I bought was diablo 3, only game that is remotely interesting is diablo 2 resurrected. Microsoft deleted my mojang account as well. Seems like new xbox mgmt will accelerate their slow enshittification.

• kingleopold 12 hours ago

They used to call this spyware/malware. Now it's a regular practice by eng. teams and managers inside these big corp. Well played guys :) Congrats with new type of tricks

• flowerbreeze 12 hours ago

From FTC website: Malware is harmful software that’s installed on your device without your knowledge.

So I think that is what we should continue to call it. LG monitors are installing malware, because they install the software silently and it harms the system by making it slower and disrupting the work of the user with advertisements.

• sys_64738 11 hours ago

If it's not malware then what is it called today?

• supertrope 11 hours ago

"Telemetry." "Personalized experiences."

Basically doublespeak.

• someothherguyy 10 hours ago

I mean, nothing new there. (Mal/Ad/Spy)ware just has been more prevalent in the browser and on mobile apps the last ~15yrs instead of being installed via modified windows installers.

• delusional 11 hours ago

I would be very surprised if some random manager of some low level engineering team made this decision. It seems more likely this was a marketing or partner relations department idea that was presented to high level leadership.

I don't understand why we expect some manager somewhere to stop stuff like this.

• lardosaurusrex 7 hours ago

I dunno why so many people across different platforms insist that anyone concerned about this is overdramatic.

This is one of those things where if I found the person responsible I would likely spit in their face; if not worse. It's quite literally spyware installed as you plug it in much like those old DVD DRMs from sony that would install spyware.

It's garbage.

• sixothree an hour ago

Imagine a coworker doing this.

• regexorcist 10 hours ago

Seriously, why use Windows in 2026? Such a hideous OS and ecosystem with endless malware, backdoors, and dark patterns.

• MatejKafka 9 hours ago

You know why desktop Linux doesn't have much malware? Because ~no one uses it. That's it. Once you get users, you get malware.

The rest of your comment is just as ignorant.

• regexorcist 9 hours ago

There is plenty of malware for Linux. The difference is that the OS won't install it for you.

• frollogaston 4 hours ago

I don't like the standard practices for installing software in Linux though. Most Mac or Windows users will go to the publisher's website and download. In Linux, it's often recommended to install via a package manager, possibly not even from an official repo, and especially not in Arch. More ways for the supply chain to get compromised, and it has.

So nobody is installing "monitor drivers" for Linux, but they're probably frantically installing packages trying to fix some random issue.

• coldtea 4 hours ago

There was malware for systems with 1/1000 the userbase of Linux. Even Amiga and Atari had plenty of it, macOS when it had 2% share, and others.

• guax an hour ago

No one uses it? There are dozens of us!

• fsflover 4 hours ago

Linux doesn't install malware, because it is free software, which guarantees the four user freedoms. Whenever someone adds malware, anybody else can remove it for everyone or create an equally useful fork without it. Try this with Windows.

In other words, Stallman was right, and proprietary software developers have too much power over users. And they inevitably, sooner or later, leverage this power for (more) profit, even if you paid for the product.

• MatejKafka 4 hours ago

Except there's plenty of proprietary software for linux, you just won't find it in default repos and have to install it manually.

• fsflover 3 hours ago

Did I say otherwise? Any proprietary software for Linux suffers or will suffer from the same problem. But not Linux itself or any free software running on it.

• whobre 10 hours ago

The worst OS except for all the others.

• timpera 7 hours ago

Excellent hardware and software support (especially for Snapdragon/ARM64 CPUs and Microsoft Office) and best in class multitasking/window management are the top 2 reasons for me. Like someone else said, it's the worst OS, except for all the others :)

• pier25 7 hours ago

Gaming

• gambiting 10 hours ago

IMHO it's the best OS as a games developer, Visual Studio just doesn't have anything remotely close. And all console toolchains are windows only. But genuinely as a C++ dev I much much much prefer it over MacOS or even Linux for work.

• Grombobulous 10 hours ago

Of course this is a “I need the OS for work” situation. It reminds me a lot of 20 years ago when we’d say things like “I’d love a Mac but it’s not compatible with anything I do for work,” and that sentiment didn’t last.

I definitely wouldn’t predict that Linux is taking over the world or anything but it wasn’t that long ago that playing AAA games on Linux on day one of release was ludicrous. Now the most popular PC handheld runs Linux, a PC console launched that runs Linux.

Now we have hardware like the MacBook Neo that threatens Windows even more. Sure, the XPS 13 came out and is arguably a compelling alternative. But I think the mindshare damage has been done on that one.

The idea that Windows might disappear entirely is not that far-fetched, especially when you look at Microsoft’s financial results.

If I was a PC OEM like Dell I would probably band together with other OEMs like Lenovo to make my own Linux distribution and support Windows offboarding even further as a hedge to my business.

• gambiting 8 hours ago

Yeah for sure. And I wouldn't be surprised if at least Sony and Nintendo released their toolchains for Linux for the next generation.

IMHO the big difference is in enterprise Vs personal Windows, enterprise Windows can genuinely be a very lean, fast experience that is great for work. But my personal PC running windows is very firmly in the "I wonder what the latest update will break" teritorry.

• StumpChunkman 6 hours ago

Have you tried Rider? I've been using that for C++ Unreal development and absolutely love it. It does help that IntelliJ was my daily driver for Java dev for a while.

• gambiting 4 hours ago

Yes, for general writing/reading/navigating code it's fine. But (imho) when you really need to get down into debugging some engine level crash, I'll take VS over Rider every time. Might be personal preference.

• 999900000999 9 hours ago

Linux is great if you win the hardware support lottery.

I've had several laptops where audio just doesn't work even on rolling releases. Or the screen freezing up constantly.

This was all with relatively new hardware within the last year or so.

My issue with the Linux community is if you bring this up it's all of a sudden the fault of everyone but Linux.

The end user should of picked better hardware.

The hardware OEMs should of shipped Linux support.

The end user is lazy for not installing an RC kernel.

Macs are great, but my current workhorse computer has a 2TB SSD, and only cost 550$ with the SSD upgrade.

Vs 2000$ for the cheapest MacBook with a 2TB SSD

• drnick1 6 hours ago

You don't have to win the hardware support lottery if you do a bit of research or buy a laptop made for it.

• 999900000999 5 hours ago

>or buy a laptop made for it.

Which is usually at least 2x as much if we're talking about buying a System 76 laptop.

Windows laptops go on sale very often.

Although I will admit I have an HP laptop I brought last December that worked out of the box with Ubuntu. Nvidia drivers and all.

• regexorcist 9 hours ago

> Linux is great if you win the hardware support lottery.

This is fairly easy to do by just not buying the absolute latest hardware. Installing something like Fedora in a 8-12 month old laptop I just can't recall last time I had issues.

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

I've had plenty of issues on ~2y old hardware too. Does your laptop sleep properly, do the fans scale properly, do wireless chips like Bluetooth and wifi work right, does audio (incl over BT) work, and does it switch between graphics cards if applicable?

• 999900000999 9 hours ago

How exactly would a new Linux user know this ?

What happens when they install Ubuntu and the Wifi doesn't even work ? An experienced Linux user might figure it out.

A new user would, very reasonably, assume Linux doesn't work and reinstall Windows.

• fsflover 4 hours ago

> How exactly would a new Linux user know this ?

It's easy: whatever is preinstalled will be guaranteed to work reliably. Worked for me.

• 999900000999 2 hours ago

So sticking with Windows because that's what the computer probably shipped with ?

• fsflover an hour ago

No, buying preinstalled Linux.

• thejokeisonme 12 hours ago

Your OS silently installs malware. Doesn't get much worse than this.

• inigyou 12 hours ago

Your OS is malware, if it's Windows.

• timpera 7 hours ago

Windows may not be the best OS for you but it definitely isn't malware.

• garciansmith 6 hours ago

If Windows continually supports third parties installing malware (without your consent and through Windows update, not some third party updater), at what point can the OS itself be considered malware?

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

The OS itself already does way worse things than what this LG adware does.

• inigyou 4 hours ago

What is the evidence that Windows isn't malware?

• discordance 12 hours ago

McAfee should be classified as a virus

• chrismorgan 11 hours ago

When preinstalled (as multiple major OEMs do), or when bundled in unrelated installers in these sorts of ways, it matches the definitions of scam excellently, and protection racket not badly.

When you uninstall, they give you an opportunity to type a reason. I wonder if anyone actually reads my accusations of them being scammers and bad people. I have uninstalled McAfee from more people’s computers than I care to remember.

• fragmede 11 hours ago

How exactly does it match the definition of a scam? Windows does get viruses, and it does protect against them. It's not something you actually need, like most consumer VPNs, but they have high pressure sales tactics to trick people into buying it, but they do deliver what is promised, which makes it not a scam. They are creating artificial demand with their scare mongering, and I tell everyone I know not to get it, and to enable Windows Defender, but that's still not a scam.

• supertrope 10 hours ago

It depends on your definition of scam. Is McAfee a total fraud, not delivering on its core functionality of anti-virus scanning? No. But it's selling something most people don't need and uses information asymmetry, fear, and dark patterns to make money. Microsoft Defender has solved the anti-virus problem. (It doesn't solve the computer security problem but that's out of scope of AV). To play devil's advocate, without bundled bloatware PCs might cost $10 more.

• chrismorgan 10 hours ago

They push this message hard: unless you pay us, the bad guys will eat your lunch.

The truth is that if you uninstall their software (and hopefully also if you just let the trial lapse, though I don’t actually know whether Defender Antivirus gets enabled automatically in that case) Microsoft will defend you against the lunch-eating bad guys just as well as McAfee, for free.

That easily qualifies it as fraud.

For that reason, I’m willing to call it a scam when preinstalled or otherwise installed without user intent. I wouldn’t call it a scam if people installed it deliberately (though I would still disparage it and its tactics).

• supertrope 11 hours ago

If a software package can't be uninstalled through the normal process and needs a separate uninstaller program, it is similar to malware. Many anti-virus suites and anti-cheat software require this. Take from that what you will.

• BatteryMountain 11 hours ago

10 Years ago. Complete garbage spyware.

• dhash 12 hours ago

it's worth noting that the price of these monitors got cut in half due to this news -- great for the linux users out there

• sigio 12 hours ago

Still seeing them for ~600 everywhere, which is completely in line with historic pricing: https://tweakers.net/pricewatch/2246090/lg-ultragear-oled-34...

• encrypted_bird 13 minutes ago

Jesus Christ, $600 for a monitor?

• Gualdrapo 12 hours ago

I don't feel like spending my money on some horrible corpo pulling out stuff like this, even if I've been using linux since 2006. Who can tell if they will do this to other OS in the future?

• ptx 12 hours ago

My understanding is that the monitor doesn't do anything by itself - it's just Windows detecting the device and automatically downloading and installing LG:s proprietary add-on software. The monitor itself isn't attacking the machine by exploiting vulnerabilities or spoofing user input or anything like that.

So you won't have this problem if you're running Linux and other Free Software under your own control. The problem in this case is just another example of why proprietary software can't be trusted.

• embedding-shape 11 hours ago

> My understanding is that the monitor doesn't do anything by itself

The understanding should also included that unless LG actually asked Microsoft to implement this autoinstalling malware, it wouldn't have been installed by itself.

I think parent commentator is making the argument that they don't want to financially support companies who engage in these sort of things, regardless if this particular scenario applies to their environment or not.

• ptx 10 hours ago

Sure, but I was addressing the question that was asked (although perhaps it was asked rhetorically): LG cannot do this to you if you don't install their proprietary software, so Linux users are safe (assuming they use a trustworthy distro).

You could choose to buy from another vendor, but other vendors have the same incentives to abuse your trust in the same way once they manage to persuade you into running their proprietary software on your machine.

• leni536 12 hours ago

This is probably Windows pulling LG software through Windows Update bases in EDID. Linux won't ever do this BS.

• iamnothere 5 hours ago

Linux won’t, but wait until LG ships a low bitrate 4G IoT card in future monitors for ACR!

• delta_p_delta_x 11 hours ago

> Linux won't ever do this BS.

Arch Linux's AUR was recently hit by an actual malware supply-chain attack[1], which I would claim is arguably worse than adware. NPM is regularly in the news for supply-chain attacks. And then there was the XZ utils debacle in 2024. I concede that Microsoft is in part responsible for facilitating something like this, but just because something is free and open-source or based on Linux doesn't make it a universal panacea for malware or supply-chain pwnage.

[1]: https://lists.archlinux.org/archives/list/aur-general@lists....

• delusional 11 hours ago

I wouldn't be so categorical. This isn't really a kernel concern, and I could completely believe that there are some distros out there that pull in random packages based on hardware detection.

The saving grace of linux currently is that volunteers package most of the software, and they don't generally package malware. There is no structural guarantee there, and if we invite corporate interests to package at some point (like flatpack and snap wants to) this is 100% going to happen eventually.

• sigio 12 hours ago

Why do people even install 'drivers' for things like monitors. (Or usb devices running 'standard' protocols). The OS handles these just fine by itself.

• wccrawford 12 hours ago

In this case, they aren't.

I woke up the other day to a notification that my LG monitor driver was installed, with a little window on how to use the on-screen crap.

Absolutely useless, since the buttons for the monitor are right there on the bottom of it, and probably easier to use than the software.

• chrisjj 33 minutes ago

> Absolutely useless, since the buttons for the monitor are right there on the bottom of it

... and so out of arm's reach, right?

• Joel_Mckay 12 hours ago

Indeed, our Windows 11 offline Steam box also needed to disable LG & Switch App in taskmanager, and set LG apps to manual start in Services.

Apparently the 3 applications have some sort of screen partitioning/sharing capabilities, but it is still unclear if the LG App was remote access or not.

So far, LG is earning a lot of justified bad press. Should have returned it when I had to turn off the screens power-save mode to get it to stop fading out randomly. =3

• subscribed 11 hours ago

The article is about people NOT installing it but getting it installed anyway :)

As to why people do install such software? It sometimes provides additional features, controls and settings. For example with touchpad you could set the sensitivity, hot corners, set the scroll behaviour the way you like it, etc.

With monitors you might get a better colour profile (P3 instead of just sRGB), I don't know. I don't use monitors like this.

• functionmouse 11 hours ago

the OS handles these now by installing the malware. Zero click.

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

Sounds like this malware gets installed even if you don't manually install anything.

> Connecting some LG monitors to a Windows PC may automatically install software that promotes McAfee subscriptions

I too have a LG monitor, but haven't booted Windows in some days, guess I'll stay put in my Arch environment until they've fixed this shitshow.

• onaclov2000 12 hours ago

But this assumes you plug in USBC .... Right? HDMI and display port can't....install over right?

• embedding-shape 12 hours ago

I don't see any details in any of the texts I came across, but in theory the implementation could be that Windows sees the ID of the monitor once connected through any sort of connection, then when matching ID is found it installs the malware. Rather than the installer is sent from the monitor to the computer. Would make updates a lot easier, and if they really want to spread this malware, can activate it for a lot more monitors.

• onaclov2000 11 hours ago

That makes some sense to me, I think for some reason my brain assumed they were like actively controlling the PC to download things other than updates, (and low key assumed part of this update was supposed to be for software on the monitor not the desktop)

• jdw64 12 hours ago

Most commercial solutions are Windows-based and use the Windows API. HDMI and DP also have two-way communication channels. This is something you learn when you do hardware coding.(Of course you already know this, but this is for the other people reading this comment.)

Typically, the Windows update server downloads packages mapped to hardware IDs in the background. Since LG's business in Korea has been failing and their AI efforts are stagnating, they exploited their McAfee partnership marketing as a pipeline. Windows' Plug and Play does make development convenient. The DX experience is good.

Linux is quite fragmented. That's good from a 'my computer' perspective, but not from a 'product' perspective. And then there's the jitter issue. Windows has stable paid solutions, while Linux has version discrepancies.

In fact, the reason Linux is considered secure is simply because hardware vendors haven't standardized enough to build automatic deployment pipelines.

In programming terms, we all know singleton is bad, but for Plug and Play, it's overwhelmingly convenient.

• drnick1 6 hours ago

> In fact, the reason Linux is considered secure is simply because hardware vendors haven't standardized enough to build automatic deployment pipelines.

The Linux security model (sudo to install or update software) doesn't allow this. No reputable distribution would include a program that scans hardware identifiers and prompts the user for permission to install proprietary software from a third-party source. This is possible on Windows because of the "universal backdoor," aka Windows Update, with Microsoft's consent.

• zahlman 12 hours ago

> simply because hardware vendors haven't standardized enough to build automatic deployment pipelines

Wouldn't it require cooperation from the distros anyway? You say "HDMI and DP also have two-way communication channels", but that doesn't force the OS to communicate over those channels. And it also doesn't force the "mapping of packages to hardware IDs" to be what the hardware manufacturer wants it to be.

• jdw64 11 hours ago

Your point is idealistically correct, but realistically it's not. Because when people install Windows, they don't want to go through the process of installing drivers for other hardware devices. And usually the driver versions depend on the OS version too.

Right away, with numerous distributions like Ubuntu and Arch, it's hard to account for all the possible cases from a production standpoint. But Windows has very few versions. As long as you pass Microsoft's standard specification, it just runs on Windows. That difference is huge. What you're saying is ideal, but when selling a product, time is money.

In other words, to summarize our conversation:

'As you said, separating them is the right thing to do. But UX Uesrs basically wanted that kind of deployment authority, and in the process, the problem of abusing it arose.'

It's a beginner level problem, but at the same time, it's also a difficult one.

• chmod775 12 hours ago

Windows automatically tries to download and install drivers for some hardware you plug in, including monitors. That's what is happening here.

• Someone1234 11 hours ago

The monitor itself isn't installing anything, Windows detects the device by unique ID, and uses Windows Update to get the driver which itself triggers a Windows Store application (malware) to install.

The monitor only sends a unique device ID, everything else is handled by Windows.

• Joel_Mckay 12 hours ago

We have an offline account Windows 11 Steam box, and the stupid popup still hit our machine a few days back. It did ask for screen access (said no), but there is no obvious button to opt out of the adware popups (select don't show, and click X to close).

Disabled LG & Switch App in taskmanager auto start, and set to Manual for all 3 LG process names in Services.

A lot of bad karma, for such an buggy monitor that doesn't even work properly till you turn off the silly power-saver auto-dim mode. =3

• lapelusa 11 hours ago

LG is not a computer OS developer. Microsoft is. Microsoft has steered from developing software to developing malware for years now. This is simple: LG and McAfee paid MS to DP this, and they did.

It still blows my mind that most people still put up with this kind of behavior. I get that some people can't get away from Windows due to genuinely needing to use software that will only run on it, but that has to be around 0.1% or less of current windows users. There is no justification for the other 99.9% to choose to stay in such a toxic relationship.

• Kelteseth 12 hours ago

Can confirm. This happened to me yesterday on my Windows 11 machine. Uninstallation was only listed in the Microsoft Store -> Library.

• scottydelta 9 hours ago

Similarly after getting annoyed at my TV for showing ads and other privacy issues, I have started working on a smart TV version of the casting device my startup makes.

I have been using it for both personal use and other work use-cases, here is a demo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jObZzI2_pv0

Just like youtube, I can log in to my netflix, amazon prime and then use the touch screen to choose the movie to watch and it gets played on the external screen. I am building it how I would use it as a power user.

• newsoftheday 8 hours ago

We have a smart TV on the way. We do not plan to run the setup, it won't have Internet access. We plan to do what we've done for over a decade now, connect our Kubuntu laptop in the entertainment center to it and select it as the default input device. And occasionally watch OTA TV shows. So we will use it as ... a monitor and plain TV, that happens to have far better video and sound quality than our old TV.

• scottydelta 8 hours ago

that's the same conclusion I came to and the device I am developing is basically a Raspberry Pi with my own modified OS that has a casting canvas and it can show all kinds of content.

No third-party installs, ads and spywares!

• drnick1 6 hours ago

Not sure what your homegrown solution is, but check out Plasma Bigscreen too.

• scottydelta 5 hours ago

it looks very interesting, thanks for pointing me to it.

My solution is a casting device like chromecast or apple tv which works without apps and cables. Now I am extending the device's canvas for personal use case without the concept of app stores. AI can control the canvas, show multimedia content, open any website/app, and show you options to log in by extracting context, then control it.

So I can tell it to open netflix, it shows login options on screen and once logged in, you can ask it to show catalog or play something by just talking to it.

It can connect and cast content to TWO external screens simultaneously, that I think is the most powerful feature.

• paweladamczuk 4 hours ago

I once plugged in a Logitech keyboard on a fresh system and got a colorful branded popup covering several inches of screen real estate in the bottom right corner. It was urging me to download some Logitech software.

As far as I know, the source of the graphics was not the unifying receiver that I plugged in the USB port, and the notification was not using any OS API meant for hardware to be avle to prompt the user for additional download. It was a Logitech-built DLL shipped and loaded by the operating system as part of some default driver for the Logitech keyboard.

• throwa356262 12 hours ago

Last time a company abused platform driver delivery to install adware, Microsoft threatened to pull their drivers altogether.

But those were different times...

• Ciantic 9 hours ago

I also discovered that these days motherboards come with a payload in their chipset, which gets installed automatically in background unless you figure out to turn it off from BIOS before installing Windows. In my case it was bunch of ASUS useless stuff, not just drivers, some "Armoury Crate" etc. Which just keeps running in background. I've switched to KDE, that kind of solved itself.

• ninalanyon 2 hours ago

Why does a monitor install anything at all? Why does it even have a mechanism to do so?

• callamdelaney 9 hours ago

They were doing this over a year ago [1]

[1] https://www.linkedin.com/posts/callam-d-b38b05105_windows-is...

• downrightmike 2 hours ago

linkedin EW

• throwatdem12311 9 hours ago

Installing drivers and software for connected hardware is just something Windows has done through Windows update for a long time.

Is this a good practice? I don’t really know. We used to get drivers on CDs, but barely anyone has a drive on their computer anymore. You could download them from the vendor website but these are usually a mess and very difficult to navigate to find the right thing — impossible for your grandma.

Could do like Linux and just build trusted software right into the kernel - but then people will complain about bloat.

So we are where we are. I guess.

• frollogaston 5 hours ago

It's pretty rare nowadays to need drivers for specific hardware that ordinary people are going to plug in. Maybe printers are the unfortunate exception.

• dist-epoch 8 hours ago

Windows already ships with gigabytes of drivers. This is why you can plug most popular hardware on an offline Windows and it will work.

• barelysapient 11 minutes ago

Another reason to avoid windows.

• jzer0cool 3 hours ago

How to ensure physical devices like keyboard, monitor, mouse are safe? Essentially all recording devices.

• nipperkinfeet 6 hours ago

Over time, major tech companies have learned from malware writers and now incorporate these tactics into their own products. This is a matter of great concern.

• pluralmonad 10 hours ago

A malware OS installing other malware seems fitting.

• dcj4 10 hours ago

windows update is a well known malware vector, how does this warrant any news? if you absolutely have to use windows, you either go through the effort of stripping the particular version you chose from all the spyware and malware it comes packaged with and gut the malware loader paths out of it, or you accept that you're running a botnet node you have little to no control over.

• bravo777 8 hours ago

this is the only valid, reasonably sound and grounded comment in this entire discussion, bravo.

• bravo777 8 hours ago

p.s. not being sarcastic

• ta988 5 hours ago

Windows is malware that pulls other malware.

• inigyou 12 hours ago

They also come with terms of service which assert that you will inform everyone in the vicinity of your TV that their voices are being recorded by your TV.

• Telaneo 4 hours ago

My heart aches for those who can't opt out of using Windows.

• cosmotic 3 hours ago

If you're going to blame someone here, it should probably be Microsoft. They are the ones that built the system LG is utilizing.

• duxup 3 hours ago

I’m on team blame both.

• mfro 7 hours ago

Fun fact, Gigabyte motherboards do the same thing. Thankfully they give you an option to disable it in BIOS.

• sinoue 9 hours ago

Trust is a valuable commodity that once lost is very hard to regain. LG's big brother installs has me questions buying anything LG to bring in my home.

• Gud 10 hours ago

Not surprised.

My wife CONVINCED me to buy an LG tv instead of my typical dumb monitor.

Now I get constant ads and a constant nagging of updates available, that will install more ads and spying features...

• CrimsonRain 9 hours ago

Update firmware.

Turn off LIVE PLUS

block internet for the tv from router

Enjoy.

That's what I have been doing for years.

• regexorcist 8 hours ago

Also don't agree with the optional policies, they can be unchecked if you already did. That disables a bunch of crap too.

• regexorcist 10 hours ago

I have a pihole in front of my LG TV blocking nearly every DNS query it tries. I only allow a couple streaming apps I do use and see zero ads.

• whalesalad 10 hours ago

LG TV’s are really really good. If you never connect them to the internet. And that rule should be applied to all TV’s. Use an external device like an Apple TV or a self-crafted solution (Roku, Amzn stick, etc all garbage phoning home and listening with Alexa crap)

Treat your TV like a computer monitor (ironic here in this context lol)

• BoingBoomTschak 9 hours ago

Image quality may be good (minus the horrible banding and ABL) but I'd put LG and Samsung in the same bag concerning hardware reliability: don't expect it to last much more than the warranty period and if it does, give some offerings to your lucky star.

• whalesalad 6 hours ago

In my experience they are both good. I have a 15 year old 1080p Samsung 55” panel that has moved across the country 3 times. It’s in my garage and still works great. My C2 OLED is 5 years old, knock on wood still working great. B5 OLED latest in my fleet it’s only a year old.

• winstonwinston 9 hours ago

Microsoft can remove device driver crapware from being distributed via windows update if you can get their attention on this.

• buzer 9 hours ago

If someone is in EU and is affected by this they could potentially utilize GDPR to make both Microsoft and LG take responsibility for this.

It's hard to say directly from the article if there is any GDPR breach. If everything was part of the installer and it doesn't actually submit anything (including downloading the ad) to LG then it's harder to argue that there is GDPR violation, but knowing the SOP of these kinds of software that is unlikely.

If the software did indeed send personal data to LG then there are at least following question: How was Article 13 notice delivered to user? Article says that this was installed quietly. Did Microsoft deliver Article 13 compliant notice to user at some point? They probably did deliver their own notice (though it's open question if it's compliant), but not LG's. However since Microsoft is the one that installed the software and they exercise control over the standards which must be met, it's possible that they would end up being joint controller at least for some processing.

I should add that Article 13 requires that the notice is given "at the time when personal data are obtained". The only exception is when "data subject already has the information" and possible Article 23 restrictions, but those are unlikely to apply.

If someone wants to make a complaint they should first make Article 15 request to LG. Copy of personal data is useful, but 15(1) information is the primary goal. Additionally ask for information on how and when did LG provide you the Article 13 notice if they did indeed process your personal data.

After that if they cannot show that they provided Article 13 notice when they received your personal data submit a complaint to your local DPA. You can additionally flag other violations as well if they are applicable (e.g. not naming recipients as part of Article 15 response, not giving actual retention time or meaningful information how that is determined, invalid legal basis etc.). You should also flag in the complaint that Microsoft is likely joint controller for some of the processing given that they are the ones who approved the automatic install of the software which violated GDPR.

• infinite_spin 10 hours ago

the paranoid part of me thinks this is a war of attrition, where if every company imaginable has to be taken to task for intrusive behavior that we'll eventually grow numb to it, or that with a large enough onslaught we'll never be able to outpace it. It's not like there is profit to be made from preventing this behavior, and incredible incentives to, at minimum, turn a blind eye.

• boomskats 12 hours ago

Not great, but also not at all surprising.

Not sure about other solutions, but one suggested workaround here would be to silently uninstall Windows without consent.

• was8309 7 hours ago

the instructions to enable "Prevent automatic download of applications associated with device metadata" don't work for me w/ W11, any ideas? thanks

• shostack 28 minutes ago

Or for anyone on Windows 10 Home

• dev1ycan 2 hours ago

The quick state in which we're devolving into a dystopia will eventually be studied a hundred years from now...

• rbanffy 12 hours ago

At this point, such shenanigans are to be expected when using Windows.

I guess my next machine will have a VGA port ;-)

And no Windows.

• classified 11 hours ago

As long as you don't need some Windows-only software, Linux is a viable alternative now. KDE Plasma is a great desktop environment and even most games run flawlessly on Steam. And if you do need Windows occasionally, you can put it into a VM.

• subscribed 10 hours ago

Eh, kinda. I have new-ish MSI laptop with nvidia and it's still not good enough. I tried on the spare nvme and it just doesn't work well enough with these few games I want.

Close but still not there. And Plasma has its own problems (I have it on my work laptop with Fedora).

• astonex 12 hours ago

Shame on Microsoft for allowing this

• Havoc 10 hours ago

Why are hardware manufacturers so shit at software?

Whether it’s router safety or NVIDIA software hammering DNS servers hundreds of thousands of times or this. Across the board they seem below average competent when it comes to software. I get that they’re specializing on hardware but why so very bad?

Edit. This isn’t even the only thread today. See TPlink fucking up on leaking your GPS coordinates also on front page

• tantalor 11 hours ago

Windows is malware

• lloydatkinson 10 hours ago

That's the second time, probably more, you've been saying this in the thread. Blaming users for "buying" Windows is ridiculous too.

• hangrybear666 an hour ago

This should not only be illegal in the EU but for the entire world. Malware level shit

• DevPulse 8 hours ago

I am using an LG ultra wide monitor and have not had any popups or ads.

• variadix 8 hours ago

Alienware does the same thing, and as far as I could figure out, there is no way to stop it. The enshitification of Windows at this point is incredible.

• throawayonthe 12 hours ago

? isn't this normal windows behaviour?

• bravo777 8 hours ago

I agree, this isn't news, just flame bait to smoke out the lurking FOSS enthusiasts on a Saturday morning.

• j45 5 hours ago

This appears to be much worse on so many more fronts than this article says.

It's basically how a virus would infect your computer through a USB Key.

Forcing itself to be installed, hiding what it does, sustaining itself across reboots, bypassing all security restrictions... because a monitor might need something new after all these decades?

• AlienRobot 11 hours ago

I have an LG monitor and I think I managed to avoid this by using Linux.

• newsoftheday 8 hours ago

Same, also bought an LG TV to replace our aging 2 decade old TV. Nothing says you have to run the TV's setup. Use an external device for streaming, preferably running Linux and you have full control and no Ads or telemetry.

• atoav 11 hours ago

Good to know. LG is now on my blacklist.

• ChrisArchitect 6 hours ago
• motbus3 12 hours ago

I think this is how they are going to make us pay rent for what we bought. They will make everything unusable unless you pay more and make some cuckoo TOS saying that you agree to be held in contempt if you circumvent their measurements.

Honestly, if we don't push it back hard, it will only get worse and worse. Why we were cancelling people if they used wrong pronouns and suddenly we got tired of doing the same with stuff that we all should agree on that is terrible.

• msla 6 hours ago

There's two maxims:

You get what you pay for.

If you're the customer, you're the product.

"You get what you pay for" means if you buy proprietary software, you get software from proprietary vendors who act like modern proprietary vendors act these days, which is using every avenue to maximize profits. There's no recourse, because it is proprietary and, therefore, belongs to the software maker, and not you. It is not your property, it is theirs.

Which leads into...

"If you're the customer, you're the product" because customers are valuable products. You willingly bought the service, so your data is data from someone who is interested in the company and probably willing to buy more from it and its partners if the company can target you. Your data, therefore, has resale value, making you a product to be sold.

• __MatrixMan__ 8 hours ago

It's shit like this that caused me to start refusing to help my mom and her friends with their windows computers. I'm not going to support their shady activities anymore. If you want my help the first thing we're doing is installing Linux.

• Hikikomori 12 hours ago

Last 2 were LG, been looking at a new one but I guess I'll go with another brand that has their panels.

• justsomehnguy 12 hours ago

And Razer, Logitech, nvidia and everyone else who has it's driver package accepted into WU.

No, you can't have a "(o) just the driver" checkbox because... honestly there are a lot of reasons and the device manufacturers are the guys who demand that in the first place.

• maccard 12 hours ago

With the quality of that software, it wouldn’t surprise me if the driver didn’t work without the userspace app at all. The GeForce experience at least you can disable, but if you have any branded components getting all of their management software off your PC is incredibly difficult

• justsomehnguy 12 hours ago

Logitech M720 Triathlon is currently listed €64,99 at their site.

The "programmable buttons" on it works through the user space app which is needs to be running in order to intercept and replace the button actions.

No app running? No replace.

App is stalling because the CPU was busy? No replace. (EDIT: or no action at all, lol)

Is €65 mouse could store the less than a 1 kilobyte of the settings on itself? Of course not.

On a third day I just turned it off and went for the other vendor altogether.

To add an insult to an injury I knew the software would be mess so I installed it on a notebook relegated for the 2nd line duties. Less than a year later the notebook started to cry what there is no space left on the disk - which was quite strange because there was nothing what would fill up quite a plenty of a free space.

Well, every month or two the Logi software (which I no longer even used because I didn't use the mouse) downloaded ~1GB update, stored the update, installed the update. Never cleaning up nor the updates nor the previous versions. Tens of GBs of a useless software just for the sake of the process.

• maccard 11 hours ago

The logitech software is absolutely awful. All of the functionality is on device, but you can manage it with https://logiwebconnect.com/ instead. I’ve used Logitech mice as my daily driver for years with this.

• Georgelemental 12 hours ago

I am very happy with my Triathlon, but I use the 3rd-party Linux software Solaar https://github.com/pwr-Solaar/Solaar

• sys_64738 11 hours ago

This is a wonderful app for pairing. No Logitech spyware needed!

• sys_64738 11 hours ago

I avoid installing Logitech spyware on my Mac but there are FLOSS apps to do the equivalent. There's even a pairing FLOSS app for Linux to avoid installing Logitech spyware. FLOSS is amazing. LinearMouse is the Mac app.

• mbrndtgn 12 hours ago

Razer mice are the worst because they are just HIDs and could work without any special driver at all! Also I don't need their whole suite on every Windows computer I plug my mouse in. I think most people would just configure their Razer mouse on one PC, save the settings in the firmware of the mouse itself (I guess, I've actually never used their driver suite) and then never touch their software again.

It's just crazy to me that a lot of keyboard manufacturers have basically standardized on VIA as their firmware which can be configured via WebUSB without installing any additional driver. But my mouse somehow needs a gigantic driver suite just to configure and save some settings? It's just madness.

I like Razer mice and their headsets, but I will never install any of their drivers. Ironically I feel more comfortable using Razer hardware on non-Windows devices than on Windows precisely because they don't support other operating systems.

• zahlman 11 hours ago

…Do these devices just not work on Linux or something?

• justsomehnguy 7 hours ago

Depends on what you are calling 'working'.

Basic drivers prove a basic functionality.

• phendrenad2 8 hours ago

All gaming brands try to install software with every driver update. AMD, Nvidia, Razer, Corsair, etc. The difference is LG made it silent, which is a big no-no. Pushback should be on LG, a respected consumer brand that should know better.

• grayhatter 10 hours ago

So I own 5 LG monitors. But now I can't buy LG. I also refuse to support Samsung.

Are there any high quality panel manufacturers left that aren't run huge pieces of shit? Or at least try to respect the people buying their hardware?

• BoingBoomTschak 9 hours ago

Panel? Not really since Panasonic exited the market.

For complete monitors, the sole make I trust is Eizo but they only make professional (business or photography) products these days, and I'm _not_ going back to 60 Hz. Dell doesn't deserve trust but their UltraSharp line usually is "okay" even if my U2724D has uniformity issues near the bottom. Iiyama also remains a good one in my books.

But if you want OLED, abandon all hope. The technology is so compromised and the market so monopolized by the collective Market for Lemons style race to the bottom targeting gaymers that I intentionally went for IPS black (yes, LG.display, I know...) instead.

• grayhatter 9 hours ago

I think Eizo is what I'm looking for, I've never heard of the brand before, so I appreciate the recommendation! Hopefully I can convince myself to buy something slower than 120...

I don't mind paying for a bit more for professional gear. In part, because quality is important, but much more important to me is respect.

• BoingBoomTschak 7 hours ago

Their ColorEdges are definitely very good (I had a CG2730 just before that Dell) but now that my eyes tasted 120 Hz - even if only for page scrolling or the mouse pointer - I simply can't go back.

• luciana1u 12 hours ago

we finally cracked self-installing software, it just turns out the payload is McAfee and the installer is an HDMI cable

• supriyo-biswas 12 hours ago

We had autorun.inf in the past installing automatically from any random USB drive[1]. The fun days where you always feared contracting malware if you so happened to plug a random USB drive in :)

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autorun.inf

• Grom_PE 10 hours ago

And some USB drives pretended to also be a CD-ROM to circumvent the limitation of autorun.inf not executing on removable media.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U3_(software)

• greatgib 11 hours ago

If you had time to spend, I'm wondering if you couldn't sue LG or Microsoft in some countries for something equivalent of "hacking". Like intrusion in a computer network. As it is unsolicited installation of something that is unexpected.

As there is no consequence for them, again there is no reason that it changes or that it doesn't get worse in the future.

• GuestFAUniverse 10 hours ago

Oh, come on! LG force fed people with ads on TVs. And now everybody acts surprised?

Do. Not. Buy. LG.

There are a lot of decent alternatives. Stop buying from the sick heads.

• HighGoldstein 10 hours ago

> Do. Not. Buy. LG.

> There are a lot of decent alternatives.

Can you name them? Dell and Samsung are the main competitors for displays as far as I'm aware, Dell tends to be hit-or-miss when it comes to monitor features and quality, Samsung's high end displays come preloaded with a whole OS. The monitor market is really in the toilet.

• petepete 7 hours ago

Samsung are as bad as LG for advertising in their TVs.

I'd happily buy and use a Dell monitor in my front room next time around. I don't use the speakers or tuner in my current TV so I'm not sure what I'd be missing out on.

• jdw64 12 hours ago

In Korea, pretty much all devices come with Windows. It's hard to live outside of Windows. Most programming is done in CPP,C#, and even when people use C, the majority are working on top of an IDE. The OS kernel layer only really appears in things like Samsung phones—the vast majority of work is on the application layer, and most consumers are on Windows on their desktops. It seems unavoidable

• inigyou 12 hours ago

This is also true outside of Korea.

• anonym29 12 hours ago

If you're using Windows on a personal device in the first place, you're pretty loudly declaring that your consent doesn't matter anyway.

That's not your computer, that's Microsoft's computer. You're the threat model they lock it down against, you're the schmuck that keeps them fed, and you're the possible terrorist/hacker to be surveilled, tagged, tracked, and monitored.

If you care about consent as it relates to your use of technology, you shouldn't be using Windows in the first place, and this has been obvious for well over a decade now.

• inventor7777 9 hours ago

Seems like every day I don't use Windows, the less I miss it lol

• BoingBoomTschak 12 hours ago

[Laughs in Linux/BSD]

• throwa356262 12 hours ago

HN doesn't like your tone and you are being down voted. But in general you are correct, Linux and bsd users are less affected by such shenanigans.

Short personal story:

I had a win10 machine were HP kept installing some "analytics" service. This happened even on a clean windows install so I guess they used the same delivery mechanism LG is using here. After having read the HP ToS (where they basically gave themselves unlimited rights to monitor anything I did on that machine), I decided to wipe the disk and install Linux.

But I guess it is just a matter of time before EU or US make spywares mandatory on Linux too. Chat control and age verification seems to be the first step towards that.

• microtonal 11 hours ago

But in general you are correct, Linux and bsd users are less affected by such shenanigans.

Mac users too (at least for now).

• tialaramex 12 hours ago

I don't know about the BSDs but in Linux the reason is that a volunteer (in principle it could be a paid employee, I guess maybe it is for RHEL etc?) decides what gets installed

It is absolutely possible that when you plug in an LG display it installs and runs software on your Linux system†, just that rather than "Somebody at LG who earned a bonus" the decision maker was Sara in Portugal who fat fingered a change when trying to make a Python script for a PCI digital TV receiver work properly on 32-bit.

It does feel more like an amusing mistake in that case whereas even if LG tells us it's a mistake we know it was to earn $$$.

† Obviously YMMV but such "plug and play" features are commonplace because they're useful

• microtonal 11 hours ago

I have absolutely no clue what you are talking about. There is no mechanism in standard Linux distributions to automatically download software from a vendor when you plug a device (apart from firmware updates through fwupd, but those are curated).

So perhaps you could elaborate?

• tialaramex 11 hours ago

> no mechanism in standard Linux distributions

Now, when I first ran Linux in the mid-1990s, this was true. "Plug-and-play" is just peaking over the horizon. Other systems have had it for years (the Amigans for example) but for the PC it's pretty new.

But today a whole lot of mechanism is spun up when the kernel realises something new was added. A netlink socket talks to a udev daemon, in userspace and that daemon, being ordinary userspace software can do whatever it wants including of course run a bunch of arbitrary shell scripts, which can in turn do whatever they want. So yes of course they could download arbitrary software, or delete all your files with a Z in their name.

> from a vendor

Where the Adware comes from is of no consequence to the end user. "Um actually, the file came from Microsoft's servers" is irrelevant.

[Speaking more specifically of fwupd, which is ultimately fed by hardware vendors directly]

> but those are curated

I'm sure Microsoft considers that they are curating their system too. We both just think (I assume you're not here to defend Microsoft) their curation sucks.

I want to be sure we're pointing at the right thing here. The problem isn't that your Windows PC can end up running software because a device was plugged in, that's actually convenient and a benefit to many people and that works in Linux. The problem is what was delivered.

• pessimizer 7 hours ago

> Where the Adware comes from is of no consequence to the end user. "Um actually, the file came from Microsoft's servers" is irrelevant.

Wrong. If I have a business relationship with MS where I've agreed to accept adware, this is meaningful. If I've bought a monitor that never informs me that it is installing adware, especially adware on their servers that could change at any time, this is a problem. It is different when the mailman opens my mailbox than when the person who cuts my grass opens my mailbox.

> The problem isn't that your Windows PC can end up running software because a device was plugged in, that's actually convenient and a benefit to many people and that works in Linux.

It's also a problem that Linux has allowed itself to be invaded by a creepy octopus of a user-hating system with tons of mutual dependencies, trying to gradually replace everything on your OS.

The problem is that Windows is running things without your explicit approval. The problem with Windows and new Linux is that it even has the ability to do so. Security became protecting the system from the user, rather than protecting the user from the network and devices.

The idea that userspace can do anything in userspace is a bit of a red herring, though. The question is how the malware gets into userspace in the first place. In the case of Windows and systemd, the malware is integral to the OS itself.

> that's actually convenient and a benefit to many people

To reiterate, it is not in any way convenient or a benefit to anyone that software is installed silently and secretly by their monitor. The idea that having to approve arbitrary software installation is some great inconvenience doesn't pass the laugh test.

• lordleft 8 hours ago

Not only Linux/BSD, but MacOS. Not that Apple isn't annoying either, but it tends to avoid the windows bloatware stuff.

• potato-peeler 12 hours ago
• qmr 12 hours ago

Beyond tired of the rape mentality from Microsoft and other evil mega corp's.

Remember when you used to own your "personal" computer?

• bravo777 8 hours ago

Windows works well most of the time for most people. I have a couple of Windows PC's, both exotic and standard, and I get what I paid for out of them. Humans love to hyper fixate on the failure cases when they're bored, and this is just one of them for Windows.

Mostly anyone who has a need to work for privacy and making their own lives difficult by removing automations deserve working through the barrier of entry to do so.

• adamtaylor_13 11 hours ago

This is an excellent use of agentic AI, btw. Fire Claude up and say, "Remove LG malware and mcafee from this computer. Make regex changes so it can't be installed again."

My current windows 10 install is cleaner than any other windows machine I've ever owned due to using Claude to deep dive and rip stuff out.

• someothherguyy 10 hours ago

> excellent use of agentic AI

you run claude code unsanboxed on your machine and give it privileged access?

• adamtaylor_13 10 hours ago

On my windows machine I do. Not on my important machines.

• orbital-decay 7 hours ago

Giving the data to Anthropic instead of giving it to LG and McAffee, fascinating

• bcraven 11 hours ago

"Prevent this software having unfettered access to your machine by giving some other software unfettered access to your machine"

• adamtaylor_13 10 hours ago

That's a hot-take, but yeah. Something like that.

Probably more like, "Prevent adversarially installed software from having unfettered access to your machine by giving software you specifically requested unfettered access to your machine."

If it makes you feel safer, you can just tell it to give you the commands run them yourself. The point is, I'm not a Windows sysadmin so idk how to do stuff like this--claude does.