Oil Change software snoops through hard drive
Alan forwarded this to me. Thought it might be interesting. -Declan ------------------------------- Heads up: Privacy & Continuous Access Ks implicated by new software This press release for a new product - a software agent - has implications for privacy and continuing access issues, because it works by scanning user's hard disks and automatically providing software updates. Unanswered Qs: 1) What other kinds of info does/can it troll for? 2) What does it do when it finds unregistered software? 3) Does it implicate ECPA? 4) Will updates be available through other means? 5) Must a user affirmatively grant permission to the software agent? 6) Can a user decline or limit the agent's access? 7) What uses may the agent's owner make of data collected? etc. Alan L --- press release: *** "Digital Oil Change" CyberMedia announced today at PC Expo that it plans to automatically "service" personal computer software via the Net with a newly unveiled product called Oil Change. The company reports that Oil Change automatically replaces outdated, bug-ridden software and hardware drivers with clean updates. CyberMedia says the product is designed to use the Net to find, download, and install updates to Microsoft Windows 95 software applications and drivers. Oil Change reportedly tracks all currently installed versions and revisions of all Windows 95 software and hardware drivers on a PC, and then dials into CyberMedia's Internet Web Server for related updates. Users in need of an update are alerted by Oil Change with a description of what the update will do, and then the product finds the update on a software manufacturer's Web site, downloads, and installs it. Beginning today, CyberMedia says it will offer a free beta version of Oil Change for a limited time at its Web site.
On Wed, 19 Jun 1996, Declan McCullagh wrote:
Alan forwarded this to me. Thought it might be interesting. -Declan [..].] Unanswered Qs: 1) What other kinds of info does/can it troll for? 2) What does it do when it finds unregistered software? 3) Does it implicate ECPA? 4) Will updates be available through other means? 5) Must a user affirmatively grant permission to the software agent? 6) Can a user decline or limit the agent's access? 7) What uses may the agent's owner make of data collected? etc.
Well, if you want definitive answers, use Stan Mitchell's File Monitor, ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/examples/windows/win95.update/schulman.html#w95fmon But free to fear-monger in any case... -rich
But this isn't MS's RegWiz. It's capabilities sound much greater, and it's not clear how to opt out, etc. from the press release: << Oil Change reportedly tracks all currently installed versions and revisions of all Windows 95 software and hardware drivers on a PC, and then dials into CyberMedia's Internet Web Server for related updates.>> is this thing scary? I don't know. Does software like it have potential for abuse? Absolutely. Fear mongering? I don't think so. Just a Heads up. Alan Lewine ------ Rich Graves wrote:
On Wed, 19 Jun 1996, Declan McCullagh wrote:
Alan forwarded this to me. Thought it might be interesting. -Declan [..].] Unanswered Qs: 1) What other kinds of info does/can it troll for? 2) What does it do when it finds unregistered software? 3) Does it implicate ECPA? 4) Will updates be available through other means? 5) Must a user affirmatively grant permission to the software agent? 6) Can a user decline or limit the agent's access? 7) What uses may the agent's owner make of data collected? etc.
Well, if you want definitive answers, use Stan Mitchell's File Monitor, ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/examples/windows/win95.update/schulman.html#w95fmon> But free to fear-monger in any case...
-rich
participants (3)
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Alan Lewine -
declan@well.com -
Rich Graves