Hi…
One wish per post? YOU GUYS!!! I’d be accused of flooding (and, besides, I don’t think Jessica Biel and Catherine Zeta Jones works for you, do they?!)
My wish, for this post, then…
Cruising around Windows Explorer, folder after folder, viewing hundreds of executable files, I hunger to be able to select any number of them that I want of .exe files and just right click my way into the context menu and selecting something such as…
“Comodo 1 - Total Net Connection Deadstop!” or/and, …
“Comodo 2 - Total Internet Connection Deadstop!”
…and, in so doing, having those .exe files’ names auto-inserted into the CFP “Ban A New Blocked Application” feature listing, without having to open CFP’s interface at all.
That increased feel of control and the enhanced “conceptual” feel of having power over those doubted executables would increase trust in the CFP interactive process - a “transparent” form of network Government, in a way. It also gives the user a sense of getting back to being a little more in control of their own security (always a good place to stand, and at which to encourage others to stand) - and, basically, less “out of the picture”.
In the case of a folder known to contain many sub-folders and executables, you could have the context menu that simply digs in and includes every exectuble found, within all of them - Comodo 1 and 2 still appearing in the context menu, together for this situation, also.
Once a file or folder is tainted in this way, a right mouse click on it, later, would be able to loosen it from the ban, just as easily.
Is this feature doable without heavyweight code changes?
Ian.