Microsoft has vowed to better disclose the actions of its antipiracy tool once it is installed on Windows PCs.
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-3513_22-6081286.html?tag=nl.e589
The tool, called Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications, is designed to validate whether a copy of Windows has been legitimately acquired. However, it also checks in with Microsoft on a daily basis, the company confirmed Wednesday.
This has alarmed some people, such as Lauren Weinstein, a civil liberties activist, who likened it to spyware in a blog posting.
Microsoft disputes that notion. It said that WGA's regular call home is innocent and done for necessary maintenance purposes.
"The WGA Notifications program checks a server-side configuration
setting to determine if WGA should run or not," a company
representative said in an e-mailed statement. "As part of the pilot,
this gives Microsoft the ability to disable the program if necessary."
No meaningful data is exchanged during the check-in with
Microsoft, which happens after a computer starts up, the software maker
said. Regardless, the company does receive a user's IP address and a
timestamp, Weinstein said in his blog posting.
"We can argue about whether or not the tool's behavior is really spyware," Weinstein wrote on his blog Tuesday. The question is whether Microsoft has provided sufficient notice, he added.
Microsoft acknowledged that it has not been forthcoming enough about
the antipiracy tool's behavior, but countered that its tool is not
spyware, since it is not installed without a user's consent and has no
malicious purpose. Still, Microsoft is considering several options to
make its actions clear to the user, including amending the software
license, the company representative said.
Microsoft
launched WGA in September 2004 and has gradually expanded the
antipiracy program. It now requires validation before Windows users can
download additional Microsoft software, such as Windows Media Player
and Windows Defender. Validation is not required for security fixes.
Originally, people had to validate their Windows
installation only when downloading additional Microsoft software. Since
November last year, however, Microsoft has been pushing out the WGA Notifications tool along with security updates to people in a number of countries.
The first time that a user runs WGA Validation to check if their
version of Windows is genuine, the information sent to Microsoft is the
Windows XP product key, PC maker, operating system version, PC bios
information and the user's local setting and language. Microsoft
discloses that this information is sent in the WGA tool license.