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: Small automation scripts to apply these exclusion rules to the system or application. Summary of Attributes Description Format 7-Zip Compressed Archive ( .7z ) Purpose

Visual debugging (e.g., WPF Snoop) or privacy software configurations

: Structured configuration data for the snooping software's engine.

If you found this file on your system and didn't install a developer tool like Snoop, it may be part of a or, in some cases, a custom configuration for a privacy-focused utility.

: Lists of file paths, registry keys, or process names to be excluded.

It may be associated with , a popular WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation) spying/debugging utility. Developers use Snoop to inspect the visual tree of running applications. An exclusion file like SnooperExclude would contain a list of applications or processes that the utility should ignore to avoid performance issues or crashes. 2. Privacy or Anti-Monitoring Tools

The archive likely contains a "blacklist" or "whitelist" of items. The typical contents of such an archive would include:

The name suggests it is used to prevent specific processes, folders, or files from being tracked or "snooped" by a background utility. This type of file is common in two main contexts: 1. Diagnostic or "Spying" Utilities

Snooperexclude.7z

: Small automation scripts to apply these exclusion rules to the system or application. Summary of Attributes Description Format 7-Zip Compressed Archive ( .7z ) Purpose

Visual debugging (e.g., WPF Snoop) or privacy software configurations

: Structured configuration data for the snooping software's engine. SnooperExclude.7z

If you found this file on your system and didn't install a developer tool like Snoop, it may be part of a or, in some cases, a custom configuration for a privacy-focused utility.

: Lists of file paths, registry keys, or process names to be excluded. : Small automation scripts to apply these exclusion

It may be associated with , a popular WPF (Windows Presentation Foundation) spying/debugging utility. Developers use Snoop to inspect the visual tree of running applications. An exclusion file like SnooperExclude would contain a list of applications or processes that the utility should ignore to avoid performance issues or crashes. 2. Privacy or Anti-Monitoring Tools

The archive likely contains a "blacklist" or "whitelist" of items. The typical contents of such an archive would include: : Lists of file paths, registry keys, or

The name suggests it is used to prevent specific processes, folders, or files from being tracked or "snooped" by a background utility. This type of file is common in two main contexts: 1. Diagnostic or "Spying" Utilities