ADSSpy 1.1

Developed by Soeperman Enterprises Ltd.
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1.1 See all
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Soeperman Enterprises Ltd.
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ADSSpy is developed by Soeperman Enterprises Ltd.. The most popular version of this product among our users is 1.1. The name of the program executable file is ADSSpy.exe. The product will soon be reviewed by our informers.

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rating Christopher Jay Wolff
I have to encourage those people who make our lives easier. Program seems to work great for what it does. I made me happy. I don't know enough to know whether to delete my ADS, but ADSSpy gives me a place to start.

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Christopher Jay Wolff
I found ADSSpy v1.11 at BleepingComputer and it is my first attempt to investigate my machines. Today I chose a USB flash drive that contained a backup of my Surface RT 8.1. I have two Surface RT 8.1s. They are my main machines. This Flash Drive was plugged into a Dell Vista laptop for file deletion and new use. Vista was unable to delete about 8 files because their filename was too long. I had this occur during hack problem a few years back when deleting files directly on my RTs. So I thought I'd try ADSSpy.

Secure Boot and Bitlocker are designed in for RTs. As expected, once logged in and on LAN I have no trouble getting data files to other machines and using them. Since RTs are ARM-based and not Intel-compatible, Microsoft has designed them to only be able to install apps from Microsoft Store. I haven't found anything like ADSSpy there. I have not looked into whether Windows Defender cleans out ADS problems. Windows Defender is the only thing available for RTs.

ADSSpy is great on my Dell Vista laptop and makes it so much easier than messing around with Windows command line to find all ADS files. My first full scan of Dell Vista machine listed about 30-40 files and I believe all are binary. I viewed almost all of them with the right-click and view contents button. They could all be legitimate but I cannot tell. I have no idea how difficult it would be, but could a button be added in the "View Contents" context, that would be able to decompile these binaries into some human readable code? Would be great. Or in place of that difficult task, could there be a way to submit the data to you folks for confirmation?

So then I logged into the Surface RT from which the flash backup was made, and tried to run the Dell Vista ADSSpy over the LAN to scan the Surface RT C: drive. The error was it was not an NTFS disk. CMD on the RT tells me the NTFS is version 3.1 so must be because over LAN or something. Can that be possible to do over LAN in the future?

Thanks for your product.

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