The feature, which is enabled by default during upgrading, could put children at risk as well as being a huge potential cause for embarrassment
Windows 10 sends a weekly “activity update”
on childrens’ internet browsing and computer history to parents, by default and
without telling anyone. The feature could be dangerous as well as
embarrassing, users have pointed out, allowing parents to watch everything
their children do on the computer.
The operating system sends a weekly note that
includes a list of websites children have visited, how many hours per day they
have spent on the computer, and for how long they have used their favourite
apps, according to reports.
The feature appears to be turned on by
default for family accounts — not notifying either children or their parents
that they are being spied on — and was reported by parents who hadn’t asked for
and weren’t aware of activating the feature themselves.
Some worried that the feature could
accidentally out young LGBT people, by sending details of their web browsing to
their parents. That could then in turn put them at risk of abuse by their
parents, or danger, Twitter users have warned.
there are so many queer and trans kids that are going to be beaten, kicked out
of homes, or cut off from support networks. thanks microsoft.
—
FORmula TRANssexual (@morganastra) August 24, 2015
Others have worried that the feature is part
of a shift towards “teaching children from the youngest age their every motion
is being digital watched and they should self-censor as appropriate,” wrote
Twitter user mcc.
Maybe soon there will be
a generation of children who has no space at all
—
mcc (@mcclure111) August 24, 2015
Parents that warned about the feature have
told young people to be aware that their parents might be spying on their web
browsing.
“This weekend we upgraded my 14-year-old
son's laptop from Windows 8 to Windows 10,” wrote a Boing Boing reader in an
email to the site.
“Today I got a creepy-ass email from Microsoft titled
'Weekly activity report for [my kid]', including which websites he's visited,
how many
The reader, known as Kirk, said that he
couldn’t be sure that the reports were directly related to the upgrade. But
they began very soon after the upgrade.
“OK, I admit that the timing might be
coincidental but that would be one hell of a coincidence. I've never seen
anything like this until we upgraded to Windows 10, and then I got the spy
report the following business day.
“A message to young readers: if you have
Windows 10 now, your parents might be getting the same kind of report I did.
Don't assume your own computer has your back.”
The dossiers are just the latest example of
worries about invasive spying on Windows 10 — which includes settings that allow Microsoft
to look in on users’ computers, and which continues to send data to Microsoft
even when they are turned off.
Source | http://www.independent.co.uk/
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