Posted March 28, 2018
paladin181: I do sincerely wish people would stop referring to Galaxy as "malware" as that is a very specific definition for very bad software. Galaxy is PUP (Potentially Unwanted Program) at worst, and a decent client at best. Malware causes actual harm to systems, which as far as I have seen, Galaxy definitely doesn't. Hyperbole only goes so far before people stop hearing you. When you later complain about actual malware on your machine, no one will take you seriously because you consider the client to be such.
So what would you call something which is sneakily (currently there are lots of cases, even I have done it, where forgetting to check something means this gets installed) installed onto your machine? Then there is the connection to the net, anything which connects outside should be viewed with extreme caution. Are gog trustworthy, probably to a point so malicious may be low, incompetence however is shown daily one the website and at every release. And then there is the advertising, I am sure even the most noble of "clients" spend most of their code base capturing various elements of data about people, this is effectively what the internet is. Do I want this on my machine, no, is there a way to ensure this doesn't happen, no. So it is acting against the will of the user in this case me, hence fulfils part of the definition of malware as given by Wikipedia. Is it spreading itself around without users realising it, check.
You may call it PUP or gray ware, or whatever the going keywords are, I frankly can't be bothered with modern day gibberish, to me this program is an unwanted dangerous piece of software which, until removed from games it malware. The keyword is optional, and hiding your software in other software with the intent to have it installed by accident or intent is not the workings of an upstanding company.