Re: Windows 10
windows 10. The best spyware microsoft has ever released. ( becuase you can not stop it spying on you )
http://www.pcworld.com/article/29717...ce.html?page=2
gives you some basics, but dig a little deaper..
http://arstechnica.com/information-t...-to-microsoft/
windows 10. The best spyware microsoft has ever released. ( becuase you can not stop it spying on you )
http://www.pcworld.com/article/29717...ce.html?page=2
One setting you should consider disabling is all the advertising integration in Windows 10. Some of this was also present in Windows 8, but if you’re just learning about it now you might as well turn it off.
Personally, I don’t mind seeing ads on websites since that’s what pays for most of the free content we see online—including this site. What I do mind is “ad personalization.” I don’t need ads that are supposedly tailored to my personal tastes thanks to little cookie spies that follow my travels around the web. Generic ads targeted at a site or app’s most likely demographic are just fine by me, thanks.
Turning off personalized ads in Windows 10 is a two-step process. First, go to Settings > Privacy > General and slide the option that says “Let apps use my advertising ID for experience across apps (turning this off will reset your ID)” to Off. (We’ll come back to the Settings app later to deal with the rest of those privacy settings.)
Personally, I don’t mind seeing ads on websites since that’s what pays for most of the free content we see online—including this site. What I do mind is “ad personalization.” I don’t need ads that are supposedly tailored to my personal tastes thanks to little cookie spies that follow my travels around the web. Generic ads targeted at a site or app’s most likely demographic are just fine by me, thanks.
Turning off personalized ads in Windows 10 is a two-step process. First, go to Settings > Privacy > General and slide the option that says “Let apps use my advertising ID for experience across apps (turning this off will reset your ID)” to Off. (We’ll come back to the Settings app later to deal with the rest of those privacy settings.)
http://arstechnica.com/information-t...-to-microsoft/
Other traffic looks a little more troublesome. Windows 10 will periodically send data to a Microsoft server named ssw.live.com. This server seems to be used for OneDrive and some other Microsoft services. Windows 10 seems to transmit information to the server even when OneDrive is disabled and logins are using a local account that isn't connected to a Microsoft Account. The exact nature of the information being sent isn't clear—it appears to be referencing telemetry settings—and again, it's not clear why any data is being sent at all. We disabled telemetry on our test machine using group policies.
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