Software owners might interpret their violation of freedom 0 as an excuse to violate your privacy. Microsoft's TOS for Vista and later demands the ability to inspect and delete your files for licensing, law enforcement, and to protect the safety of Microsoft employees. If some of the software on such a system forbids writing bad things about Microsoft, for example, the OS blanket demand would allow them to use the OS's built in file indexing system for that purpose. Thanks to Snowden, we know they betray user's privacy, even while publically claiming to protect it.
That might not be what was asked but it is very interesting. It's an example of a violation most people would not imagine and shows how one violation leads to another. On Tuesday 02 June 2015, Yoni Rabkin wrote: > Yes, there are such anti-features, but that is irrelevant to the > original question since most of the terms of a typical software license > cannot be validated by software (whether free software or proprietary.) > That doesn't make the terms any less real or binding.
