Comment on FastCompany: E-books are fast becoming tools of corporate surveillance
Uranium3006@kbin.social 1 year agoIt used to be you worried about getting a virus from pirated books, now the corpo options are provably malware
Comment on FastCompany: E-books are fast becoming tools of corporate surveillance
Uranium3006@kbin.social 1 year agoIt used to be you worried about getting a virus from pirated books, now the corpo options are provably malware
porksoda@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Not just probably, they’ve literally done it. Look up the Sony rootkit scandal.
Excrubulent@slrpnk.net 1 year ago
They said “provably”, not “probably”, so the good news is we all already agree :)
AFLYINTOASTER@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Well politic’d, friend
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 1 year ago
You don’t even need to go back to the early 2000s Bertelsman-Sony copy protection scandal.
Millions of people install rootkits on their PCs today in the form of anti-cheat software that has a greater level of system access than Bertelsman/Sony ever had.
Ring 0 level kernel access. Code that can be executed with above admin level privileges and do anything it wants to with your system. Shit, it could reflash firmware on your PC if it wanted to, allowing malicious code to survive OS reinstalls.
And not only that - it’s not even effective as an anti-cheat solution, leading to the question of why they bother with it anyway? Data harvesting? Security theatre?
piecat@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Yeah that’s spooky. Could we even tell if data is being harvested?
I know there’s also secret op codes and hardware. Real spooky shit. We really need open source hardware.