On 2/16/10 6:29 PM, Reed Loden wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Feb 2010 11:47:48 +0200
> Gadi Evron<[email protected]>  wrote:
>
>> Just to make sure we have the same terminology, as a friend of mine
>> disagrees:
>> 1. It adds content to web pages I visit (so far just Google) by
>> suggesting tweaked searches, possibly (unconfirmed) by sending data
>> about my searches, which would make it spyware.
>> 2. When I click these suggested better searches for what I was looking,
>> it sends me off to a different search engine, which I define as adware.
>
> Thanks for the information. I can confirm that the latest version of
> FlashGot does include code that adds "search refinements" via
> "Surf Canyon" to all Google, Bing, and Yahoo! search result pages. This
> new "feature" was added in the most recent version of FlashGot
> (v1.2.1.13), is enabled by default, and can be disabled by modifying
> the "flashgot.surfcanyon" preference in about:config to "false". As far
> as I can find, the only place where this change is mentioned is a
> one-line entry on http://flashgot.net/changelog.
>
> I can't speak for our AMO admins, but I'll definitely be following-up
> with them to see what our current policies are concerning such things
> and whether this change/addition violates any of those policies.
> Thanks again for the report.
>

If it isn't, we can always shame FlashGot.

This may not be covered by current policies, but as we have seen time 
and time again, legalities often come following new technologies rather 
than legal systems expecting them. And when abuse policies are tough, 
offenders find ways around them.

By letter of the law or not, this *Feels* wrong. So I am hopeful Mozilla 
will do something about it. However, I can't really blame them if they 
can't.

I am unsure that an AUP *anywhere* currently covers that "apps" can 
provide only with features users agree to, or that they should need to 
notify of a major change in functionality.

It's certainly a very interesting question.

The good old comp.virus FAQ defines a Trojan horse as functionality 
which if the user knew what it did, he or she wouldn't be happy about 
it. In reverse, this fits quite well.

Let's see what happens.

Thank you very much for taking a look at this.

        Gadi.


> ~reed
> Mozilla Security Group
>
>
>
>
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-- 
Gadi Evron,
[email protected].

Blog: http://gevron.livejournal.com/
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