Avast will stop selling user data to its subsidiary Jumpshot, the company announced Thursday.
"As CEO of Avast, I feel personally responsible and I would like to apologize to all concerned," Ondrej Vlcek wrote in a blog post. "Protecting people is Avast’s top priority and must be embedded in everything we do in our business and in our products. Anything to the contrary is unacceptable."
He continues, "For these reasons, I – together with our board of directors – have decided to terminate the Jumpshot data collection and wind down Jumpshot’s operations, with immediate effect."
The decision follows a joint investigation from PCMag and VICE's Motherboard into the way Avast's free anti-virus software was harvesting user data and how that supposedly anonymized data could be linked back to specific users.
The investigation pointed out how data accumulated from the "100 million devices, including PCs and phones" that utilized Avast's product allowed clients to "view the individual clicks users are making on their browsing sessions, including the time down to the millisecond."
That, in turn, would allow clients to combine data from Avast with other data to paint a fuller picture of a user's digital footprint. For example, Amazon could take the data of an "anonymous" user purchasing something from its site and match it with that exact purchase from its records and identify that user.
Apologizing for the practice, Vlcek emphasized that Jumpshot was an independent entity, and that it and Avast operated within the law. He then noted that in the process of "re-evaluating every portion of our business ... I came to the conclusion that the data collection business is not in line with our privacy priorities as a company in 2020 and beyond."
He did not say, however, how long it will take for Avast to "wind down" Jumpshot.
文章
5
浏览
45762
获赞
1
Uber Boat takes over London commuter ferry for water rides
UPDATE: Aug. 3, 2020, 10:03 a.m. BST Uber Boat has launched in London, setting sail on the River ThaBritish man who got one of the first COVID vaccines goes viral for being an absolute delight
COVID-19 vaccine distribution has officially begun, and if you're in the mood to feel hopeful aboutAll the FDA
You might wonder which Covid vaccine is the "best."But there's no inferior choice. All the FDA-authoTwitter pays $150 million fine over privacy and Elon Musk has thoughts
Twitter's past has come to haunt the social media company again. The company has agreed to pay a $15Forget Zoom. Here's how to make group video calls on Snapchat instead.
If you're trying to round up your friends or family for a good ol' video chat sesh, look no furtherToyota is recalling 2,700 electric bZ4X cars over faulty wheels
Toyota's first fully electric battery vehicle, the Toyota bZ4X, isn't off to a great start. The compNo, antifa did not invade the Capitol today, despite what Trump supporters say
Trump supporters have threatened for months that if Trump’s loss in November’s electionPilots might've captured the LA jetpack person on video
Pilots might've spotted the elusive person who has apparently been jetpacking around the Los AngelesHow to watch Apple's WWDC 2020 event
Remember tech events? They're back!Sort of, anyway. Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference (Apple Pay closes a loophole to end support for the Russian payment service, Mir
The Russian payment card system called Mir will no longer be hosted on Apple Pay, adding to the exisFacebook will no longer produce Portal devices, report says
Facebook's parent company Meta seems to be scaling back hardware efforts. Hot on the heels of the neTwitter CEO hints at actually adding edit button after Musk's poll
Listen, I've got an idea on how social media companies should be run. First, you get the world's weaReddit's former CEO slams Reddit for 'amplifying hate, racism and violence'
On Monday, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman posted an open letter to employees, saying that the company doesApple Event 2022: Green iPhone 13, purple iPad Air announced
Apple announced a new green color for its iPhone 13 and iPhone 13 Pro and a new purple color for itsMercedes' 'Drive Pilot' A.I. can take over when drivers are stuck in freeway traffic
It's 11 a.m. on a Tuesday in Los Angeles, and I am hunting for traffic.That's right, I'm trying to a