Ramblings of an old Doc
Published on August 2, 2015 By DrJBHL In Personal Computing

 

The first and worst? From MS’s Privacy Policy Statement:

“We will access, disclose and preserve personal data, including your content (such as the content of your emails, other private communications or files in private folders), when we have a good faith belief that doing so is necessary to […] protect our customers or enforce the terms governing the use of the services.”

This (to me) says my computer now belongs to them. Sorry, this is completely unacceptable.

The second? Cortana:

“To enable Cortana to provide personalised experiences and relevant suggestions, Microsoft collects and uses various types of data, such as your device location, data from your calendar, the apps you use, data from your emails and text messages, who you call, your contacts and how often you interact with them on your device. Cortana also learns about you by collecting data about how you use your device and other Microsoft services, such as your music, alarm settings, whether the lockscreen is on, what you view and purchase, your browse and Bing search history, and more.”

Cortana will also collect your speech data, to “improve” speech recognition. Shades of the Barbie Doll. So, when does your own private MS spy stop “listening”? Does it ever?

Third: Your browser (sorry – their browser): When you sign in to W10 with an MS account, the OS will automatically sync

“some of your settings and data with Microsoft servers”. This includes “web browser history, favorites, and websites you have open” in addition to “saved app, website, mobile hotspot, and Wi-Fi network names and passwords”.

This you can change…there is a way to deactivate that in your MS account settings>”Sync your settings”. That should be set to a negative as the default, not the opposite as MS has done.

Fourth: Advertisers can use your data to send you targeted ads. To me, this is Superfish all over again. You can turn this off in Settings|Privacy and flick the first switch to “off”.

“The ads we select may be based on your current location, search query, or the content you are viewing. Other ads are targeted based on your likely interests or other information that we learn about you over time using demographic data, search queries, interests and favorites, usage data, and location data.”

Lastly (and perhaps worst of all): Your encryption key is automatically sent to your OneDrive account.

So, if OneDrive is ever breached, you’re screwed. Why? Because with device encryption turned on, Windows will automatically encrypt your drive and generate a BitLocker recovery key. This key is backed up, again automatically, onto your Microsoft OneDrive account. If someone changes your data are unrecoverable creating the ransomeware situation.

Don’t you think someone should be asking your permission to do these things? Also, I don’t know about you, but I’m not the property of some corporation, and neither is my computer.

No W10 for me, thanks very much.

Source:

http://www.alphr.com/microsoft/microsoft-windows-10/1001289/the-5-windows-10-privacy-issues-you-should-be-aware-of


Comments (Page 8)
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on Aug 30, 2015

Microsoft...? NSA...? Google..? All data miners.

on Aug 30, 2015

kimpe60

Microsoft...? NSA...? Google..? All data miners.

I don't have an issue with the NSA as such, being I'm not in the US, but the other two are parasites.... and I don't know that Apple is any better. 

Sadly, the human race has become a race of 'compliant sheep' who "Oh, I like Siri: Oh I like Cortana; Oh I like Chrome" who'd prefer to follow along willy nilly and give up their rights for the sake of a little convenience.... translates into 'mental laziness' in most cases.

on Aug 30, 2015



Quoting starkers,

This is where my roots are now so it's unlikely I'll ever go back there to live.



....translates as 'there's a warrant out for 'im' in the old Dart...

Oi, I resemble that being made public.... and anyhow, how did you know?

I thought that was just between me and the arresting copper. 

on Sep 16, 2015

was going to mention this when i 1st read it a while back (only just figured out why i can't post replies here eff privacy badger blocked something)

 

https://boingboing.net/2015/08/10/windows-10.html

on Sep 17, 2015

alaknebs

was going to mention this when i 1st read it a while back (only just figured out why i can't post replies here eff privacy badger blocked something)

 

https://boingboing.net/2015/08/10/windows-10.html

I read the linked article and the latter comments, and frankly I have to agree with the original complainant and many commenters that MS has gone too far with its invasive 'Family Controls'.   For mine, it should be a family matter/decision to implement, NOT Microsoft's. to have it enabled by default... and to have Microsoft monitor EVERYTHING on under 18 accounts IS creepy.  If I had children under 18, I would be more concerned about this kind of data being collected and stored by another entity... like what if it's intercepted and/or hacked by less desirable entities for untoward and/or unknown purposes?  And I don't just mean creeps with ill-intent.... advertisers and other corporations are notorious for targeting children with persuasive ads, etc.

Seriously, Microsoft has gone too far in Win 10: re data collection and storage, and sending parents weekly emails about their childrens PC/online activities is way over the top.  First off, given how many people have their Microsoft email accounts hacked and/or tampered with, putting that information out there like that gives creeps another avenue of access to kids personal lives.  Moreover, it ISN'T going to stop bad parenting!  Parents who care about their childrens computer/onilne activities will have already taken the necessary steps to protect them... from themselves and others... and bad parents are not going to respond positively anyhow.

I once caught a youngster viewing online porn, but instead of ranting about how wrong it was and threatening to cut off internet privileges, we had a conversation that proved more useful.  One of the questions I asked was, "Would you like it for other people to be looking at you that way?" and the answer was a clear and decisive no. I didn't really need to say much more after that and we agreed that it wasn't a good idea.  I can't say for certain that it never happened again, because I wanted to show trust by not checking the logs, but I'd like to think we reached an understanding and that my trust was respected.

on Nov 06, 2015

it's not the hdd/ssd that was the issue with clean install. it's mostly the motherboard (maybe cpu too... no idea really)... so if you upgraded to win 10 with basically the same machine before aside from the storage, then it was already activated, hence why the clean install works.

i'm assuming you are not using the insider versions, because i think some of the more recent ones allow people to clean install with win7/8 keys without going through the upgrade/activation thing 1st. that will be available to everyone in the "fall update" from next week or some such.

 

 

hmm.. what the heck is http://login.vxd/?result= (with a big chunk of alphanumeric stuff behind that)? noscript blocked it for possible xss stuff when i was trying to login to this forum. weird. (as in logging in to the forum changed to that page with noscript saying it blocked it... the 1st time.. logging in again logged me in correctly)

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