Well, when the software is free, you get what you pay for.
The developers of HTTrack, a gizmo to copy websites easily, should worry more about its privacy exposures of its hapless "customers".
I'm familiar with this sort of hard-drive info exposure from Second Life third-party viewers -- this is the sort of thing that would get your third-party viewer axed from the accepted list.
The problem is that some people's folders merely say "My Computer" or "Mom" or something like that, but some people have their computer named with their first or even full name or company name.
Hence, poor Nathan -- undoubtedly Nathan Hamm because I don't think it's Nathan Detroit -- busy copying my website for reasons unknown, got caught by HTTrack's carelessness. Here's my blog visitors' log:
Gosh, this is a security analyst?! Usually he goes to the trouble of using hidemyass.com
Now why is he so frantically copying EVERYTHING on my website?
It's not going anywhere and it can be accessed here. Of course, Nathan may be collecting kompromat for his "lawsuit" -- a recurring theme of his is that somehow, I am writing "libelous" material because I...criticize his site.
I do wonder about our nation's security, with people like this doing the analysis of it. But fortunately there are HORDES of these people (I never had any idea how many!).
It's a fairly trivial matter to fix up your software so that when people use it on a website to copy it, it doesn't leave a trail with your c:/ drive information. But I suppose it's just as well to have a sense of who is obsessively copying you.