Yahoo! Online Games Contain Spyware
An anonymous reader writes "I just noticed that yahoo.com is offering Civilization III for free, online. I figured it was too good to be true, so I actually read the EULA. Guess what, yahoo is now distributing spyware. The following is a cut and paste from their EULA: '5.Collection and Use of Registration and Usage Information. In connection with your use of the Applications on Demand Services, the installed software contains an application for the collection of data pertaining to your use of the Software and the operation of the Software. Furthermore, your Service Provider will collect data regarding what Applications you use, how long you use them and in which ways you use them (collectively, your "Usage Information"). You hereby give your consent to direct retrieval by Exent of the Usage Information collected by the Software and acknowledge that the Service Provider has agreed to provide the Usage Information gathered by it to Exent (without specifically identifying you). You agree that Exent may use your Usage Information by aggregating it with the Usage Information of other users of the Software to provide general statistics about the Applications on Demand Services as well as for purposes of making necessary adjustments and corrections in the Software as shall be deemed it by Exent at its sole discretion.'"
Nothing is free, you pay one way or the other. From now on, just assume your getting the big five finger when you sign up for anything free. Your choice.
Neck_of_the_Woods
#/usr/local/surf/glassy/overhead
I found a good way to disable the spyware in these free programs.
Go to a store and purchase the software.
If someone had asked me to guess whether or not Yahoo distributed spyware yesterday, I would say yes. It's pretty much expected that if any large company gives something away for free, its probably adware or spyware. Most people don't know they're getting spyware, worse, most people don't care, and worse yet, Yahoo knows this. The solution is simple: don't use software with such absurd EULAs.
I expect that the presence/absence of the clause depends on how interesting you are.
I am, presumably, very boring and Yahoo doesn't care to know what I do. You must be either interesting or suspicious since Yahoo decided that they want to track you.
so what happens when people start blocking net access to these apps?
programs like Tiny and Zone Alarm can block access per program
(assuming they don't use bundled hooks like IE embedding).
seems better than the software-installation clauses in newer MS and java licenses.
Use my userscript to add story images to Slashdot. There's no going back.
Requiring any software reporting back any data surreptitiously to have a separate click through granting permission. Also required should be periodic user reminders that the reporting back is happening.
So does this mean that I could sell software to Yahoo! with an EULA that allows me to collect statistics on which applications they use, and for how long? On broader aspects of their business's internal functioning? What about an EULA that allows my software to trap keystrokes, gather passwords, and open backdoors on their servers?
OK, so probably this Yahoo thing is blown out of proportion and context in typical Slashdot fashion. But imagine it's for real -- would an EULA like this stand if challenged? Why or why not?
Calling all IANALs....
I tried to provide everyone with a link
o _civ_nl.hf2k
but if Yahoo is providing this for free,
I cannot seem to find a link to it,
however, I did find this...
http://games.yahoo.com/games/downloads/promo/prom
from there you have to click "sign up and play"
now, then sign in with a yahoo ID,
click "continue to rent game"
just click "single game rental" for this
then the last step before the EULA, in which there is nothing from the above quote
which calls into the validity of the above story
Conscience is the inner voice that warns us somebody is looking - H.L. Mencken
YHBT
YHL
HAND
There's a good chance they're talking about gathering statistics about the game itself (the Application) and not just any piece of software.
Yeah, and the EULA seems to indicate they can log your use of any programs, not just theirs...
The Mongrel Dogs Who Teach
Furthermore, your Service Provider will collect data regarding what Applications you use, how long you use them and in which ways you use them (collectively, your "Usage Information").
This is not limited to the games you download. If you see nothing wrong with this, then you need a new monitor.
Morons yourself.
J'aime mieux les méchants que les imbéciles, parce qu'ils se reposent. -- Alexandre Dumas
Isn't anyone else glad they put it in the EULA instead of trying to sneak it through?
That would really be spying, what they are doing now it more like buying your personal information with a game...
"I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
Assuming that this story is even true, I'd imagine that earlier in the EULA it defines the term "Applications" to mean the "Applications on Demand Services" (the capital letter is a giveaway that this is an EULA term), so it isn't going to monitor your use of KaZaA, Mozilla, etc.
Just another VMware VM. They might collect how much I play it, but if there's nothing else on the disk they won't get much valuable information.