Thursday, November 3, 2016

MyCleanPC Revisited


A few years back, I decided to take the time to look into the much talked about MyCleanPC program. As expected, the program turned out to be a huge scam. Unfortunately, the company seems to not only still be in operation, but getting a hold of new customers.

Recently, a client of mine (who I hadn't heard from in awhile) called explaining various oddities and felt that his computer finally needed a good once over by a professional. Among other problems, I found the MyCleanPC program installed. I figured this would be a good opportunity to revisit the program to see if they had made any changes.

NOPE!

The program is still complete bunk. 
This program, and programs like it, use standard scare tactics to trick users into purchasing unneeded software. Their website promises that “the full, paid version of the MyCleanPC software will attempt to remove issues found with your PC’s registry and hard drive, including removal of junk files, unneeded registry entries, Internet browsing traces, and fragmented portions of your hard drive.”
However, both this description and the literal functionality of this program only features abilities which Windows already has. This means that you would be paying for a poor imitation of what you already have. 

MyCleanPC's "free diagnosis," simply provides an attempt to scare people into thinking their computers are in horribly dire straits and that MyCleanPC (or was it MaxMySpeed.com?) can fix it all for the low low price of $39.99.

After running a scan, you’ll see an alarming count of the number of problems on your computer. However, MyCleanPC creates the no doubt alarming results by:

  • Counting every browser cookie and history entry as a single issue.
  • Counting every temporary file as a single issue, no matter how tiny it is.
  • Considering invalid registry entries as issues, when it has been proven time and time again that this would not make a noticeable difference in performance and could even harm the functionality of the computer.
  • Counting every single little fragmented file as a single issue.
All of this works together to show the user a massive number in large red font, which is almost so ridiculously text book for scare tactics that I cant help but laugh out loud every time I see it. 

I've said it before and nothing has changed;
If your computer is acting strangely - call a technician. 
I'll even take a look at your computer remotely for free. Please take a moment to read some of my reviews HERE and do not hesitate to contact me directly at (617) 396-7044 with any questions or concerns.