Google blacklisting uTorrent over third-party software bundling, report says :
Earlier this year, uTorrent got into trouble for installing bitcoin mining software invisibly on users’ systems,
which many saw as a fundamental breach of trust. u Torrent claims that
reports of an invisible installer were inaccurate, but the company still
chose to partner with a crypt o currency company whose software hijacked
CPU time and was evidently meant to do the same for GPU s, once it was
farther along in development.
According to Google, these
changes weren’t meant to target uTorrent or torrenting specifically, but
to crack down on unauthorized software installations. In a recent blog
post, Google detailed how it was rolling out new improvements to its
malware detection engine, stating: “In the coming weeks, these detection
improvements will become more noticeable in Chrome: users will see more
warnings [about] unwanted software than ever before… Safe Browsing’s
focus is solely on protecting people and their data from badness. And
nothing else.”
The problem I have with services
like this is that while they’re useful in 95% of cases, they inevitably
misclassify some software or downloads. Once this happens, the only way
to download the content is to turn off Google’s malware protection from
the Advanced Options menu, download the file, and turn it back on. From
Microsoft to Chrome, we’re seeing an increasing trend of companies exerting more and more control
over how users get updates and which software versions they can run.
It’s fine to offer novice users defaults that mandate security updates,
but those of us who understand the risks and are willing to take them
should have greater control over when and how such barricades slam down.
Ultimately, it’s my PC — not Google’s, and not Microsoft’s.
#surendera@surenders trech world
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