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I used to have a great tool called StartupMonitor on Windows XP which informed me about every attempt of programs (or myself) to modify startup entries. Is there a similar tool for Windows 7 which also takes care of startup paths/keys that XP did not provide?

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  • I am still using StartupMonitor in Windows 10. However, it does only monitor autostart entries of 32 bit applications. But this works for me reliable since Windows 2000 (or Windows 98?). The autostart monitor utility detected some unwanted applications in all those years. Jul 28, 2017 at 17:20

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I use Spybot v1.62, I turn off most of the Spybot features but use Tea Timer, Tea Timer will notify you when any critical registry entry is added or changed which includes any startup items, allowing you to accept or deny the change. Been using it for years on XP and it works just fine for W7. Invaluable tool that I cannot live without.

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will stop toolbar installations (among other things) when they try to install silently with other software. enter image description here

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I set Spybot Tea timer to Paranoid mode for best protection of the registry, this can be done from the system tray icon when Tea Timer is running.

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  • Trusty old Spybot, how could I forget you? Sep 8, 2012 at 7:08
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WinPatrol will do this for you. The free version is sufficient, I ran it for years and it did just what you are describing, among other things...

It runs in the background and a dialog box pops up with several options whenever something wants to modify the startup entries..

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I am not affiliated with this product in any way, shape, or form.

Another option for analyzing your start up (not so strong in the notifications area but is a powerful tool, nonetheless):

AutoRuns

This utility, which has the most comprehensive knowledge of auto-starting locations of any startup monitor, shows you what programs are configured to run during system bootup or login, and shows you the entries in the order Windows processes them. These programs include ones in your startup folder, Run, RunOnce, and other Registry keys. You can configure Autoruns to show other locations, including Explorer shell extensions, toolbars, browser helper objects, Winlogon notifications, auto-start services, and much more. Autoruns goes way beyond the MSConfig utility bundled with Windows Me and XP.

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The tool "Сhameleon Startup Manager" does exactly what you want: It monitors the different autostart entries of the Windows registry including the Windows task manager. When a new entry is being detected a small popup window appears nearby the system tray. In the popup window one can decide to disable the new autostart entry or to kill the process which added the new autostart entry.

The latter could be very useful for everybody who do not want to run an antivirus program. The first thing many malware programs do is to create a new autostart entry. With the help of this startup monitor there exist a chance to discover and to stop this sort of malware at an early stage.

Further functionalities exist, e.g. processes which belong to an autostart entry can be uploaded to virustotal.com.

BTW Compared to WinPatrol Plus a licences of the Chameleon Startup Manager is much cheaper.

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