The cost of Avast's Free Antivirus: companies can spy on your clicks
Antivirus software should protect your machine, but one company’s free products have been labeled spyware. Avast’s subsidiary Jumpshot was caught scraping data from user browser histories such as shopping, video watching and social media posts, and selling it to marketing firms. Avast claims it needs to collect the URLs to protect against viruses, but privacy experts disagree. Even though the aggregated data was stripped of personal details, savvy marketers find ways to reconstruct identities. The practice resulted in a major investigation, detailed in this revealing PCMag article.
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Every day Refind picks 5 links from around the web for every user, tailored to the user’s interests. Picking only a handful of links means focusing on what’s relevant and useful. We favor timeless pieces—links with long shelf-lives, articles that are still relevant one month, one year, or even ten years from now. These lists of the best resources on any topic are the result of years of careful curation.
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