, 2006-07-05
A recent lawsuit filed against Microsoft should have all companies reexamining their privacy policies to determine what information they are actually collecting about customers, and what they can possibly do with it.
Expand all |
Post comment
Windows genuine disadvantage
2006-07-06
Chris (5 replies)
Chris (5 replies)
Windows genuine disadvantage
2006-07-06
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Windows genuine disadvantage
2006-07-06
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Why aren't my customers adversely affected?
2006-07-07
Gordon Fecyk (2 replies)
Gordon Fecyk (2 replies)
Re: Why aren't my customers adversely affected?
2006-07-07
Kelly Martin (3 replies)
Kelly Martin (3 replies)
Spyware vs. EULA
2006-07-10
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Mark D. Rasch (1 replies)
Where's the virus defenition for WGA in Norton Antivirus? Where's the entry for WGA in Symantec's virus library?
2006-07-12
Gordon Fecyk (2 replies)
Gordon Fecyk (2 replies)
Re: Where's the virus defenition for WGA in Norton Antivirus? Where's the entry for WGA in Symantec's virus library?
2006-07-14
GrimRebuke (1 replies)
GrimRebuke (1 replies)
So Symantec's software phones home too? Pot, Kettle, Black, Rasch?
2006-07-17
Gordon Fecyk (1 replies)
Gordon Fecyk (1 replies)
Re: Why aren't my customers adversely affected?
2006-07-10
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)

Surely we're not going to let a little thing like an "unenforceable spyware EULA" get in the way of full disclosure, proving how wrong Microsoft is, are we? It only takes days, even hours, for a new virus or spyware program to show up in Norton Antivirus' defenitions, so surely WGA's been analyzed to death after months of operation.
[ reply ]
Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/409/33788#33788