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Privacy Protector 1.6 for Windows 10 a fost chilipirul zilei în 14 iunie 2016
Privacy Protector for Windows 10 vă ajută să tratați probmele legate de confidențialitatea sistemului de operare al computerului. Numeroase servicii în Windows 10 colectează date cu caracter personal în toate modurile posibile. Acest instrument ajută la rezolvarea problemelor legate de datele personale pe Windows 10 care violează drepturile tuturor utilizatorilor de confidențialitate a datelor privind activitatea pe computer. Programul este orientat atât către utilizatorii independenți cât și spre comapnii cu standarde exclusive de confidențialitate a datelor.
Prin interfața ușor de folosit, un utilizator al Privacy Protector își poate optimiza sistemul să blocheze traficul nedorit pe serverele Microsoft. Este posibil să ștergeți anumite elemente din sistemele Telemetry și Data Collection, în timp ce restul sunt pur și simplu dezactivate. Utilizatorul are posibilitatea să acționeze la propria discreție alegând serviciile de dezactivat pentru a elimina anumite griji specifice confidențialității Windows 10. Sunt în jur de 40 de servicii (unele dintre ele rulează în fundal) care colectează și urmăresc date personale ale utilizatorului. Este posibil să ștergeți, dezactivați sau blocați următoarele unelte:
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Windows 7/ 8/ 10
12.5 MB
$39.99
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Comentarii la Privacy Protector 1.6 for Windows 10
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Actually most people use their computers for emailing, writing letters, a few photos, emails and skype (or some other internet talk). You pay for a licence that costs an arm and a leg which allows them to spy on you. I have windows 10 and as I loaded it, I turned off all the notices that gave MS the authority to spy on me. But there are something that you can't turn off. We are all socially manipulated sheep that tells you to buy the products. The social impregnation states that free isn't good, its inferior technology or simply worthless. If you are using your computer for the simplistic things as stated, then why spend money. Download one of the Linux OS systems. Linux mint, Ubuntu, Manjaro are all FREE and isn't bogged down with security as is windows. As a conspiracy theorist I suspect everything MS does is to keep other companies in business supporting the social idealism that you pay for the technology. I have updated old computers by installing Linux and boy they run faster without being bloated with security. And donate to Linux to keep them going. And now I await the attackers for my truth. So this technology is helpful, so download it. But I suggest that you download a Linux OS and dual boot. I use my Linux every day and very little in Windows
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Don't be fooled, even older versions of Windows shared some information with Microsoft, so your sense of privacy and security may have been severely compromized for a long time without you knowing about it.
Anyway, a complete list of FREE alternatives can be found here:
http://www.ghacks.net/2015/08/14/comparison-of-windows-10-privacy-tools/
Hope it helps.
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Hi, all of it sounds fine, except coming from SoftOrbits - ironically a tad hypocritical? They after all notoriously 'spy' on their own Giveaways Software on each PC turning Licensed Programs into Trials every time they offer something new one, hmm..
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Quote [There are numerous services in Windows 10 that collect private user data of all possible kinds. This tool helps to solve all Windows 10 privacy issues that violate a right of every user for confidential activity on his PC. ] UnQuote
Should not this be a class action suit by US citizens against Microsoft?
Should not this be an antitrust lawsuit by US government against Microsoft?
The OS is so rotten that 3rd parties have written software to stop the violation of privacy.
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ric:
Microsoft continues to behave with an arrogant contempt for PC users, hiding its intention to develop a massive Windows 10 user base as fast as possible behind phony "updates" that cause WindowsX pop-ups; that prepare a computer for the new OS; that then actually install that OS. The notorious KB3035583 is by no means the only trick in Redmond's book.
Particularly vulnerable have been all those trusting souls who allow the automatic download and installation of Windows updates -- something no prudent PC user should ever do. And then there've been the usual Early Adopters, people who always want to be the first with something just to be, er, first. (What price wristwatch cellphones and 3D televisions now, huh?)
It is my understanding that the US Department of Justice is well aware of what Microsoft is doing, but is waiting to see what Microsoft does next, because at the moment it seems -- emphasise the word "seems" -- Redmond is making no profit from Windows 10 but is merely giving it away. The instant it tries to exploit that user base by introducing recurring billing for future Win10 updates -- as is suspected in some quarters -- would be the game changer. However . . .
What the DoJ has lamentably failed to comprehend is that Microsoft is not merely a software developer but a major player in the massively lucrative business of the mass harvesting of personal data.
Perhaps today's news that Microsoft has paid $26 BILLION -- 50% more than the actual share price -- of networking site Linked In will open its eyes. That $26 billion delivers to Microsoft a user base of 433,000,000 people.
So now you know then, just what you, as an individual, are worth; why your identity is so valuable (go on, you do the math); and why with Win10, Microsoft has been especially assiduous in manipulating the gullible in the pursuit of a business objective far removed from the Gates original.
As to today's software: non-tecchies may well find it useful but in a case such as this, ignorance is not bliss and complacency, dangerous.
Insulating yourself against the efforts of this giant American corporation is best achieved not by a third-party software solution alone but by actual knowledge. Searching out any of the 100s of online articles out there will not only show you how to deal with Windows 10 but why you should deal with it.
Meantime, here's to 433 million new advertising pop-ups for Windows X . Way to go, Microsoft, way to go . . .
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Different people feel differently about privacy, & how far they're willing to go to protect their privacy varies. Data is big biz, & ultimately trying to maintain your privacy may become, may be already a lost cause, but rather than just blindly go along with whatever, I think it's worthwhile for each of us to consider what we're giving up, what we're gaining, & what levels of loss of privacy we're comfortable with. Then we can each contribute to the conversation, and maybe our combined voices will have an impact on how our privacy is preserved, or not in the future.
As it is, we are recognizable not just by our faces & various prints, but the way that we stand, walk, talk, write, & even type -- the rate at which we each hit different characters is an individual trait it turns out. When you use voice search Google records what you say, which makes tech sense, but then it saves those recordings - why?
There are things we can easily do... you can change settings on your accounts for Google, Facebook, Microsoft etc. You can check out Privacy Badger from the EFF, & Lightbeam for Firefox for example.
eff[.]org/privacybadger
wikipedia[.]org/wiki/Lightbeam_(software)
Today Privacy Protector for Windows 10 puts the focus on Windows 10 & its potential privacy issues. And yes, I write *potential* because the seriousness of those issues is something that's debated, not absolute. I've included some links regarding 10's privacy related settings etc., & it can be tiresome if nothing else to take all of the individual steps to get 10 to shut up. In that sense Privacy Protector for Windows 10 may be very worthwhile, putting everything on one screen.
But SoftOrbits has a vested interest in taking a more alarmist stance when it comes to Windows 10 & potential privacy issues, because they want to sell software that makes it easier to turn that stuff off -- it's no different than a company selling security software being alarmist towards malware threats... it's simply what they do. Most journalists focused on Microsoft & Windows take the oposing view, which makes sense too, as they talk to people at Microsoft constantly, & Windows is their bread & butter.
Like everything else, the greatest truth is more than likely somewhere in the middle, but it's up to you to decide what you're comfortable with. Some folks will use this as another argument against 10, & there are plenty of valid arguments both for & against 10, but again that's something for you to decide yourself. Personally I think Microsoft will force adoption of 10, so I consider the point moot -- to me it doesn't matter how good or bad 10 is, since I have accepted that I'll have little choice in the matter.
arstechnica[.]com/information-technology/2015/08/even-when-told-not-to-windows-10-just-cant-stop-talking-to-microsoft/
windowscentral[.]com/all-you-need-know-privacy-windows-10
petri[.]com/windows-10-stop-data-flow-microsoft
technet[.]microsoft[.]com/en-us/itpro/windows/manage/manage-connections-from-windows-operating-system-components-to-microsoft-services
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