Boris Goodenough said:
NLS said:
Boris Goodenough said:
However Win 10 is more or less malware in and of itself, buildt in keylogger and if they feel you are doing something against copyright laws/illegal porn etc. they can call the local authorities on you.
Any proof of this "keylogger"? Also, Microsoft has nothing to gain by manually monitoring all their customers, checking for dubious or illegal content and handing it over to local authorities. What would they gain? A pat on the back from the cops? In most countries such actions would land them in more legal trouble than whatever the local laws are for pirated content.
The EULA is pretty much there in case NSA or FBI seizes microsoft's data under a warrant. Sure they'll probably hand over any data under a court order, but they're not gonna waste lots of time and resources into proactively handing in this data.
http://i.imgur.com/9DoVoix.jpg
Apparently the EU version is different or looks different in those settings. But there are threads dedicated on a ton of tech forums how to shut off keylogger and trafficking in the registry/router and assorted.
They should a have NO access to my work/leisure time without a court order, 1984nd all that. Honestly I don't think they will take the time to go through the sea on information and dick picks to care too much personally, but they are being forced by NSA and others to do these things to hasten the "judicial" process.
The so called keylogger in that picture refers to typing into the search/adress bar in Edge (Internet Explorer). Maybe you've noticed that a lot of search engines and web browsers give you automated search results directly as you type? That's all there is to it. Yes, they should allow you to disable it, but then again it's only in Edge, not systemwide, and you'll probably use another browser anyway.
I've seen that picture thrown around in a few threads, and it's so full of shit and scare mongering. A lot of those points are either deliberately being misunderstood as "botnet" and "keylogger", or whoever did it has more experience wearing a tinfoil hat than how big data analysis works.
To sum up some things: Microsoft has nothing to win by breaking the law or doing NSAs job.