Posted on 02/28/2002 12:21:18 PM PST by PatrioticAmerican
A warning to anyone who has the PKZIP Explorer product installed and uses Microsoft Outlook 2000 for e-mail.
The PKZIP Explorer application may attach itself to Microsoft Outlook 2000 and compress any files that are attached to e-mail messages into a ZIP file format. Unless the receiving person of the e-mail has PKZIP installed on their computer, they will not be able to read the attached ZIP files. PKZIP transforms attached files into the ZIP file format, and attached files are not transmitted in the original file format intended to be sent. PKZIP does not notify users when an attached file is being compressed or that PKZIP is working within Outlook.
The installation program of PKZIP Explorer automatically installs the PKZIP Attachments. It is this installation process that attaches PKZIP to Outlook 2000 and allows PKZIP to modify attached files. Most users simply accept default settings with application installations, and with PKZIP Explorer, this causes all attachments to e-mail files within Outlook 2000 to be converted to ZIP files. Most users would not understand the installation process or that it was installing this attachment process to Outlook even if they studied what was being installed. User must be careful when installing PKZIP Explorer to not allow this to happen unless they desire all their e-mail file attachments to be converted to ZIP files.
Once the PKZIP Explorer Attachments have been installed, there is no apparent method to prevent PKZIP from modifying file attachments within Outlook. Users may uninstall PKZIP Explorer in order to prevent attached files from being compressed into ZIP files. This can be accomplished by clicking on the Start menu, then Settings, then Control Panel. Within the Control Panel, select the Add or Remove Programs icon. Once the Add or Remove Program application is shown, select the PKZIP Explorer program and then select Remove. There may be other PKZIP applications listed, but they do not modify e-mail attachments.
PKZIP is an application that compresses a file into a smaller file of a different format, and usually results in a filename ending with .zip. It has been useful for many years to compress large files into much smaller ones, especially for transmitting files via the Internet.
PKZIP is a popular program, but is becoming less common, such that not many people will be able to read a ZIP file attached to an e-mail. Many corporations do not allow PKZIP to be installed, as PKWare, the producers of PKZIP, require a corporate license that corporations are not willing to pay. Many systems administrators of computer networks do not want the overhead of another application to manage or the management of the PKZIP licenses. So, many corporations simply do not allow PKZIP to be installed and your attachments cannot be read.
User can determine if they have received a ZIP file, and need PKZIP to read it, if a file is received attached to an e-mail and has a filename ending in .zip. Users will need PKZIP to un-ZIP the file to view its contents. A ZIP file may contain one or more files. PKWare, at www.pkware.com, allows users to download a shareware version of PKZIP. Of course, the PKZIP Explorer application may attach itself to Outlook 2000 and compress and modify files attached to e-mail messages.
Users can test if PKZIP is installed and compressing attached files to e-mails sent by Outlook by sending themselves an attached file and then checking if the received file is in the ZIP file format. ZIP files end with the .zip file extension in the filename.
This problem is symptomatic of the automatic feature frenzy that is plaguing the computer software industry. It seems that if a program can do something, whether a user wants it to or not, some kid will program the software to do it, because he found that he can and thinks that it is cool. More adult supervision is needed for software companies to help prevent cool features from being a serious problem to software users.
In the old days, software would warn users, or ask, before modifying a file format or the files contents. It seems that such courtesy and necessity is not understood by todays software companies or developers.
When software continues to perform functions that users do not know is happening, the results can be very adverse. Another nagging problem is software that continues to ask a user if they want to do something each time the user performs a function within the application. An example would be when a user pastes text into an application and application asks Would you like to keep the current formatting?, and the application does this each and every time text is pasted into the application. Nagware was something previously only seen in Shareware products, but is now a common trait in too many software applications.
Software companies should stop nagging their customers to use features of their software. They should stop popping up windows that continue to ask, Would you like to.... If the software is so complex that the user needs reminders that a particular feature is present, maybe the software should be redesigned to make the feature more accessible and understood.
Software Development: Adult supervision required.
Those with packet sniffers will see the outbound connects on TCP port 17027. PKWare is a sneaky bunch:)
Wrong!
PKZip has become more popular since worms and viruses became universal.
Many web sites routinely reject any file with the .doc extension; making it a zip file is the only way Word documents can be sent in that case.
BTW, does anyone else here remember reading of the death of the founder of PKWARE in the news a couple of years ago? It sounded like a trashier remake of "Leaving Las Vegas"
SD
That's why I said find version 6.1, the last totally free release. You can still find it in many online download spots. Like here
I delete all e-mails with zip attachments...
All of these are free to download and use. Winzip is shareware, and yes I did buy a License. The other two are freeware.
I rarely post in to a thread where I agree with everyone. Usually I just lurk.
For what it's worth, I do think this is a hideous software practice.
I like the functionality, but would insist on more user information be put up front. This is going to be a great problem as time goes on, with software being able to change subtle things under the covers that 90% of the computer users don't even know exist.
I do not support Linux for my own use, but I very much welcome it and any other program that can give MS a run for its money. MS needs competition to show that people want software that works and is easy to use all of its feastures. I don't want to have to get a PhD in order to use a shrink wrap product. I have a 2.0Ghz machine with 512MB RAM. It runs like a pig compared to my "old" Pentium Pro-200 Mhz running older software. This machine is ten times as fast in many respects, and, yet, it runs today's bloated, "feature junky" software half as fast.
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