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Spyware
Spyware
[ http://www.pcwebopedia.com/TERM/s/spyware.html ]
Any software that covertly gathers user information through the user's Internet connection
without his or her knowledge, usually for advertising purposes. Spyware applications are
typically bundled as a hidden component of freeware or shareware programs that can be
downloaded from the Internet; however, it should be noted that the majority of shareware
and freeware applications do not come with spyware. Once installed, the spyware monitors
user activity on the Internet and transmits that information in the background to someone else.
Spyware can also gather information about e-mail addresses and even passwords and credit card
numbers.
Spyware is similar to a Trojan horse in that users unwittingly install the product when they
install something else. A common way to become a victim of spyware is to download certain
peer-to-peer file swapping products that are available today.
Aside from the questions of ethics and privacy, spyware steals from the user by using the
computer's memory resources and also by eating bandwidth as it sends information back to the
spyware's home base via the user's Internet connection. Because spyware is using memory and
system resources, the applications running in the background can lead to system crashes or
general system instability.
Because spyware exists as independent executable programs, they have the ability to monitor
keystrokes, scan files on the hard drive, snoop other applications, such as chat programs or
word processors, install other spyware programs, read cookies, change the default home page
on the Web browser, consistently relaying this information back to the spyware author who
will either use it for advertising/marketing purposes or sell the information to another party.
Licensing agreements that accompany software downloads sometimes warn the user that a spyware
program will be installed along with the requested software, but the licensing agreements may
not always be read completely because the notice of a spyware installation is often couched
in obtuse, hard-to-read legal disclaimers.
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