Thursday, September 10, 2009

Reading the Fine Print


Thinking about buying software to protect your children when they're online?
Parents who install a leading brand of software to monitor their kids' online activities may be unwittingly allowing the company to read their children's chat messages — and sell the marketing data gathered.

Software sold under the Sentry and FamilySafe brands can read private chats conducted through Yahoo, MSN, AOL and other services, and send back data on what kids are saying about such things as movies, music or video games. The information is then offered to businesses seeking ways to tailor their marketing messages to kids.
Apparently you can opt out, but how would you even know you needed to do so?

1 comment:

  1. "Apparently you can opt out, but how would you even know you needed to do so?" - Or know that they had "actually" opted you out? And why do I have a feeling that this is the kind of "microsoftesque" operation where every time the program "auto-updated" or got patched it reset to default mode and you had to opt out again . . .

    CWD

    ReplyDelete

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.