k9 protection download

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he software is very difficult to disable or remove without an administrator password. The uninstaller requires the administrator password to run, and if the service or process is stopped all web access is disabled. Similarly, attempts to modify the program from the windows registry or file system will also lead to all web access being disabled.
However, in Windows 7 at least, it is straightforward to disable the software. This can be done by going to Device ManagerView menu ➢ Show hidden devices, then, in the "Non-Plug and Play Drivers" group, locating the "bckd" driver selecting Properties, and in the Driver tab, under Startup, under Type:, selecting "Disabled". After a Windows restart, the driver will be disabled and K9 will not work, without affecting Internet access. Enabling the "bckd" driver again and then rebooting makes K9 work normally again. This does not work on Windows 10 however.[citation needed]
While uninstalling K9 via the Windows Installer requires a K9-specific password selected at installation, a Super User article detailed how, with administrator access, which does not display a password prompt when logged in as an administrator, one can use shell scripts to uninstall K9.
There is a bug where K9 kills the Internet connections of some tools (VLC media player, for example) (with error 10053: "Software caused connection abort"). This bug appears to occur only when K9 is installed on a 64-bit platform. Additionally, K9 has been reported to occasionally cause SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED errors on Windows 8.1.

Reception[edit]

Ken Cooper from Family WebWatch praised its ease of use and clean interface. Cooper also praised K9 for not bogging down system performance because it uses an Internet-based database.[2]
On the other hand, Neil J. Rubenking, lead analyst for security for PC Magazine criticized the filter's inability to create custom filtering for individual family members, while praising the fact that he could not find a way for children to disable the filter without also disabling access to the internet.[3]
Cnet gave it a 4 (out of 5) star rating, and ranks it #8 in Parental Control. Cnet criticizes "the lack of a chatware filter" which "leaves some holes for predation".[4]

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