>MS is not
allowing. They are ordered to do so. In this MS is not guilty - but this does not change the fact that data that go to MS (or any other US run business, for that) are not secure.
>And MS is spying on our data for it's own good. And a keylogger is spyware. What ever political correct euphemism is used by MS.
>
>I'm a customer to MS and not there test ground where MS can freely access my data only to fix there crappy work (Again, ad nauseam, only for you, I talk about MS. Not about any other software vendor). They owe me a running product and I do not owe them support to do so. As simple.
>This would be like one buy a car and the car maker has the right to track every move and change steer, wheel and engine at will.
>
>>I think you need to review this thread. I was not the one claiming Microsoft allows the US government data about us.
Apparently some of the creepier features can be disabled:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2974057/windows/how-to-turn-off-windows-10s-keylogger-yes-it-still-has-one.htmlBut that says nothing about the capabilities being uninstalled... or if "disabling" really does anything. Closed source, no-one outside of MS can say for sure. Or malware turning those features back on for its own purposes.
Sidebar: Microsoft's Privacy Statement is 17,000 words long ?!
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/privacystatement/default.aspx
Regards. Al
"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent." -- Isaac Asimov
"Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right." -- Isaac Asimov
Neither a despot, nor a doormat, be
Every app wants to be a database app when it grows up