Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 2007-03-24 08:11.
McAfee SiteAdvisor is worthless. As version 7.1 of the McAfee Security Center well illustrates, the folks at McAfee no longer know what they're doing; they seem to have kept all of the idiots and fired the good people. SiteAdvisor gives a green light even to sites like simtel.net that are notorious for spyware, viruses, etc. Don't pay any attention to SiteAdvisor. Rather, do your own independent research.
For what it's worth, your caution is quite justified. I downloaded some "public domain" games from underdog.com a while back and the install files were absolutely crammed full of spyware and other malware--that's when I discovered Spybot, which I've been using ever since.
Check around and see if you can find RR Tycoon at different sites. Notice the file sizes. The file size might vary from one download site to another, indicating tampering. (That's the warning sign I ignored when I got burned on a download of the old car manufacturing sim, Detroit.) How do you know which file size is correct? I guess it would be file at the most reputable site, whichever one that is. Research required, I guess. Good luck.
BTW, I used to have the original RR Tycoon. Great game, even came with a very informative printed manual that had history, train operation info, biographical info about some of the key figures (i.e., robber baron dudes). They really don't make games like this any more. Games today are certainly prettier, but I think the older games have more depth and certainly much more thought and care went into making them.
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McAfee SiteAdvisor is
McAfee SiteAdvisor is worthless. As version 7.1 of the McAfee Security Center well illustrates, the folks at McAfee no longer know what they're doing; they seem to have kept all of the idiots and fired the good people. SiteAdvisor gives a green light even to sites like simtel.net that are notorious for spyware, viruses, etc. Don't pay any attention to SiteAdvisor. Rather, do your own independent research.
For what it's worth, your caution is quite justified. I downloaded some "public domain" games from underdog.com a while back and the install files were absolutely crammed full of spyware and other malware--that's when I discovered Spybot, which I've been using ever since.
Check around and see if you can find RR Tycoon at different sites. Notice the file sizes. The file size might vary from one download site to another, indicating tampering. (That's the warning sign I ignored when I got burned on a download of the old car manufacturing sim, Detroit.) How do you know which file size is correct? I guess it would be file at the most reputable site, whichever one that is. Research required, I guess. Good luck.
BTW, I used to have the original RR Tycoon. Great game, even came with a very informative printed manual that had history, train operation info, biographical info about some of the key figures (i.e., robber baron dudes). They really don't make games like this any more. Games today are certainly prettier, but I think the older games have more depth and certainly much more thought and care went into making them.