More MS EULA Fun
gray code writes: "The Register is reporting that Microsoft has placed an interesting wrinkle in the EULA of WinXP SP1 and Win2k SP3 that asks for the same remote admin rights as the Windows Media Player patch that raised such an uproar. I think I'll be leaving my Win2k box at SP2, thank you very much." Update: 08/04 15:05 GMT by T : Helix150 writes that a separate EULA for W2K's SP3 "contains this nasty bit: 'You may not disclose the results of any benchmark test of the .NET Framework component of the OS Components to any third party without Microsoft's prior written approval.' Hmmm..."
Gee that was fast, almost seems like u had it prepared.
"You acknowledge and agree that Microsoft may automatically check the version of the OS Product and/or its components that you are utilizing and may provide upgrades or fixes to the OS Product that will be automatically downloaded to your computer." That's two separate things. Unless I'm reading it wrong, even if you can disable the automatic updates there's no provision for disabling Microsoft's snooping. Now, if the agreement said something like... "You acknowledge and agree that Microsoft may automatically provide upgrades or fixes to the OS Product that will be automatically downloaded to your computer, and for the purposes of doing so may check the version of the OS Product and/or its components that you are utilizing" ...I would be less suspicious of their intentions.
Forcing someone into a new agreement is illegal. Governments should give this some attention. The updates are necessary, partly because the software is sloppily written. The user does not have a good option; the only option is to get a new operating system and re-train everyone, and accept that some programs on which a business is dependent don't work. That's force.
You can remove the Microsoft EULA: Windows VBScript for automatically removing the click-through End-User License Agreements found in most installers.
It's no fun to work at an abusive company. We are seeing a rise in the number of sneaky contracts. This seems due to the presence of people with no technical knowledge at technically oriented companies. These people cannot contribute to the real work of the companies; all they can do is invent ways to abuse the customer.
As companies become more abusive, it becomes more miserable to work there. If you are good at what you do, quit and get a job somewhere where people are treated like people.
This is where it is all leading:
EULA:
- I can do anything I like.
- You have no power.
- You can't say anything bad about me.
- Everything belongs to me.
I knew a 3-year-old who said this.Slashdot has a sneaky EULA, too. At the top of every Slashdot article, it says, "The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way."
This sounds like you own your comments, doesn't it? However, the OSDN Terms of Service says at section "4. CONTENT", paragraph 6,
"In each such case, the submitting user grants OSDN the royalty-free, perpetual, irrevocable, non-exclusive and fully sublicensable right and license to use, reproduce, modify, adapt, publish, translate, create derivative works from, distribute, perform and display such Content (in whole or part) worldwide and/or to incorporate it in other works in any form, media, or technology now known or later developed, all subject to the terms of any applicable Open Source Initiative-approved license."
The contract is written in such a way as to appear that it has been made intentionally confusing. However, it looks like "comments are owned by whoever posted them" means that, yes, you own the intellectual property you created, but VA Software Corporation owns it too.
This appears similar to owning a car, but under the condition that someone else can use it at any time, and without notifying you. In any case, Slashdot's The Fine Print is misleading; it is not all of the fine print, although that line at the top of each story certainly encourages you to believe it is.
Well this is easily negated with a firewall.
.NET? Basicly unblockable unless you kill all web access completely.
No. You are effectivly trying to fight a trojan in the operating system. Unless you know exacly how it works the only sure protection would be never to connect the computer to the net at all.
For starters your opponet is the OS itself, so you can't go with a software firewall - you'd need a seperate firewall box sitting between you and the net. Second, you have no idea when the packets/connections look like, so you have to keep a lockdown on all types of connections both inbound and outbound. This can be a major pain on a general purpose PC doing vaious sorts of web access - games, voice chat, P2P, and other applications constantly bumping into to firewall.
The reak kicker is that if they really wanted to they could stll get past any firewall. They could piggyback on a legitimate connection any time you touch a Microsoft controlled website. Yeah, it's getting a bit extreme, but it's possible. The OS could keep the HTTP connection alive and insert a sideband channel in the HTML itself. SOAP anyone? Or
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- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
Step 1: Log into Windows 2000 (any flavor) with a non-administrator user account.
Step 2: Go to windowsupdate.microsoft.com
Step 3: Note the following message Step 4: Explain to me your insinuation that manual updates somehow require administrator rights but automatic ones don't.
Also, considering that the updates are installed automatically, imagine all the new and interesting EULAs that will spring up now that I no longer have the option of not agreeing to them.
At 6:28 am an article is posted about the negative aspects of the new Microsoft EULA. At 6:31 am an Anonymous Coward posts a well-written, generally grammatically-correct response that explains the need for it.
./ is being actively astroturfed?
The response is 383 words. That's over 127 words per minute.
Furthermore, this paragraph smacks of being mandate-driven...
And before we crucify Microsoft alone for including this "heinous" behavior, check Apple. Mac OS has performed automatic updating since Mac OS 9. I don't know about any other software, but I would love to see some form of update checking and/or installation method for servers, especially the variety that are intended to be installed, turned on, and forgotten, like email notifications or schedulable updates. I'd also like to see a move to create a standard through which updates can be propogated for any software. Some software already scan, like Adobe Acrobat Reader, Macromedia ShockWave, and I think QuickTime. If there were one place, maybe things could be more organized and more user friendly.
Am I the only one getting the feeling that
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