"Weatherbug" is well, a "bug"...

SageTheRage

Membership Revoked
People often wonder why the program, "Weatherbug" isn't recommended even though it seems innocent enough. There’s actually a very good reason, and it has to do with adware:

"The bug in Weatherbug"

When you consider that there are hundreds of millions of computers that are connected to the Internet, it’s no wonder why the Windows desktop has become a battleground for marketing companies.

The Internet, as a single source, has access to more people than any other marketing medium, so the number of programs that attempt to acquire a spot on your screen is endless.

Free programs like Weatherbug are the entrée for the marketing companies to gain access to your system (a.k.a. Adware). If you read the EULA (End User License Agreement), which virtually no one does, you would see that in order for you to have use of this cute little ‘weather service’ it is “supported by advertising revenue.”

What constitutes advertising revenue is completely up to them (pop-ups, pop-unders, banner ads, etc.) and can be changed as they see fit. One of the ‘associated’ programs that’s installed with Weatherbug is called ‘My Search Bar’. This little program installs a plug-in for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser so that it can get you to its advertisers search engines and web pages.

So now, in order for you to see what the weather in Kansas City is at this very moment, you have given up valuable resources in Windows, slowed down the performance of your system and modified your browsers search system.

In the over 15 years that we have been servicing computers for consumers, the one lesson that seems to never get through is that every program that you allow to be installed into your computer increases your chances of having a problem or slowing your system down.

Because Weatherbug becomes an active part of the Windows operating system, it must load every time you start your computer. Chances are, you have allowed other programs to ‘automatically’ load at startup, which causes your machine to take much longer to start then when it was new.

The various programs that battle for startup position in Windows can often times conflict with one another and cause various performance problems.

The ads that get displayed take resources from your computer and use your Internet bandwidth to deliver them, which can have an impact on dial-up connections.

Is all this really worth it so you don’t have to go to sites like Weather.com, Intellicast.com or the National Weather Service’s site at nws.noaa.gov to check the weather?

This same question should be answered by those that download free screensavers, smiley icons for their e-mail programs or file sharing programs such as Kazaa.

Is the ‘freebie’ worth all the ads, pop-ups, slow performance and potential conflicts that accompany the installation of these programs? In most cases, the clear answer is NO!

Windows has enough trouble trying to deal with all of the software that gets loaded with your printer, scanner, digital camera, firewall, anti-virus program and any associated programs from your Internet provider, so don’t make it worse by piling on unnecessary programs.

The list of programs that we recommend and don’t recommend can be found by clicking on the yellow ‘Seal of Approval’ ribbon at www.datadoctors.comhttp://www.datadoctors.com/.
 

susie_q

Veteran Member
Thank you!!! SageTheRage...I feel like a broken record trying to get my 17 year old to understand. I have copied the above and sent it to her. :)
 

gunnersmom

Veteran Member
My son downloaded weatherbug onto my laptop. I battled it for two weeks and the minute he left, I removed it. ONly problem is, weather bug comes with some little nasties that keep popping up now on the screen at start up that I have to take the time to find and remove also.

I agree with the writer, nothing is worth the valuable time it takes for all this crap to start up. Zone alarm'll tell you how time consuming it all is.
 

fairbanksb

Freedom Isn't Free
I've had Weatherbug for years and have never run into these problems. Configure it not to load at Startup. I don't understand the problem. I've never had any problems with pop up ads with Weatherbug either. :shr:
 

ARUBI

Inactive
Pretty much what fairbanksb said, goes for me. I set my preferences, which you can do at anytime and it never bothers me. I have the temp on the tool bar and unless I click it, I never see anything else. When I do activate it, there's an ad on the screen with the weather report, but no pop-ups, etc. :shr:
 

Dogwood

Inactive
I'm with fairbanksb and ARUBI on this. I've had Weatherbug for quite some time and all I see is the temp down by the time. Pop-ups have never been a problem for me.

Dogwood
 

Prairie Lady

Inactive
I just spent nearly a week of 14 hour days each cleaning up the mess in my dd's pc. Got it running pretty good now. But she has weather bug, she loves it. SOMEHOW I got it to work with NO ADS! No popups no nuttin but the weather when it's opened to a full window.

I used a hosts file, ad-aware, spywareblaster, hijackthis and I have the cookie privacy setting up high. All of these programs are listed in my security thread and I think I put the links with most of them. It works so well that I've considered using weatherbug on my own pc, something I would Never normally consider.

Becaues Iv'e got the ads blocked, she's worried she may loose the program because normally you have to have the paid version to get rid of the ads.

Weather bug COULD be a problem, but there may be other spyware on there as well causing problems.

All I know is that her pc runs like a champ now, and no ads appear in the weather bug, or anywhere else in her pc.

So you CAN have the best of both worlds.

pl
 

NC Susan

Deceased
I love Weatherbug. Up to the minute weather, its an emergency broadcast and has a great slide show pictures from across the whole continent.

It has a built in emergency warning chirp.........and when hear and then research you research the reason for the chirp, the weatherbug announces all foul, violent and pending emergency weather information.

I have cleared out the center hall closet a few times of vacumes and ironing boards (to be used as a tornadoe shelter) because "we heard the chirp" and were in the path of tornadoes.

It may be spyware, but its the only alert system we have available 24/7 as the TV is never on and the radio is rare.
 

Ought Six

Membership Revoked
The are lots of cute, useful things that turn out to be pernicious. Another one is Hotbar, that allows you add animations & pictures to your emails. I cleaned up my SIL's PC, and she was horrified when she discovered that Hotbar had been removed. I tried to explain to her about adware/spyware, but she was adamant. So, I had to set permissions in Spybot so it would not remove Hotbar, and remove the block to the Hotbar site that Spyware Blaster put in IE.
 
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