 Rogue WolfAte Your Homework, And Framed The Dog join:2003-08-12 Troy, NY | And if the party of the first part.... Really, is anyone surprised? Companies pack these EULAs so full of legalese and double-speak that we could read all the way through one that consigns our first-born children to ten years of servitude and not actually realize what we're agreeing to. And now they're just making them so long that most sane human beings simply don't have the patience to read completely through them.
I still say there needs to be a law stating that every program included in a bundle must have it's own EULA (preferably 500 words or less) and agreement box. Of course, then companies would just call the spyware "components". -- I do NOT trust the Internet. Spread tin cans and string! |
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 ThalerPremium join:2004-02-02 Los Angeles, CA kudos:3 Reviews:
·DSL EXTREME
| said by Rogue Wolf:Of course, then companies would just call the spyware "components". I think they do that already. |
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 davePremium,MVM join:2000-05-04 not in ohio kudos:7 Reviews:
·Verizon FiOS
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| reply to Rogue Wolf said by Rogue Wolf:I still say there needs to be a law stating that every program included in a bundle must have it's own EULA (preferably 500 words or less) and agreement box. Great, there are about 1500 programs in Windows XP, so that's 1500 EULAs to agree to, and 750,000 words to read. |
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 NerdtalkerWorking Hard, Or Hardly Working?Premium,MVM join:2003-02-18 Tucson, AZ | reply to Rogue Wolf No, it's been common knowledge for a while now that nearly all of the "popular" P2P programs bundle crapware.
This report, however, is a very nice run-down on exactly what is installed and how they can legally install it. -- Touch a thistle timidly, and it pricks you; grasp it boldly, and its spines crumble. -William S. Halsey
iPod Shuffle=iPos
I'm testing Gmail's spam filters: Broadbandreports1@gmail.com Spam: 2785 |
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 ThalerPremium join:2004-02-02 Los Angeles, CA kudos:3 Reviews:
·DSL EXTREME
| said by Nerdtalker:This report, however, is a very nice run-down on exactly what is installed and how they can legally install it. Blah, how useful is that knowledge? Let me know when someone finds a legal loophole that allows me to put my foot up spy/crapware vendor's asses w/o legal repercussions, then we'll talk.  |
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 Rogue WolfAte Your Homework, And Framed The Dog join:2003-08-12 Troy, NY | reply to dave said by dave:said by Rogue Wolf:I still say there needs to be a law stating that every program included in a bundle must have it's own EULA (preferably 500 words or less) and agreement box. Great, there are about 1500 programs in Windows XP, so that's 1500 EULAs to agree to, and 750,000 words to read. I really meant this as an entirely separate application (not written by the designers of the main program), but I see your point. Might have to hammer out a different definition. -- I do NOT trust the Internet. Spread tin cans and string! |
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