Ralf Corsepius wrote: > It unattendedly collects various data which is not publically available > from a local machine => SPY-WARE It only does so if you explicitly select the "Yes" option. Otherwise, NOTHING IS SENT WITHOUT YOUR PERMISSION. That's about as simple as it can be said... > Connecting this information with IP-numbers opens many opportunities for > abuse => Opens many chances to privacy breaches. IP addresses and other personally-identifable information is not sent, only the hardware listing. > You have this (BTW: absolutely not unique and forgable) hardware id in > connection with IP-numbers. This allows backtracking. Only if you tell others the UUID stored on your computer. This UUID is not sent as part of the data report, as I understand it. > Having a script that is not being run automatically (not used by first > boot), but being run at user-request as part of eg. a > bug-report (similar to bug-buddy) is a completely different topic. No, it's virtually the same thing: Nothing happens without the user's explicit consent. > There is not way to convince me about such spy-ware. If you want to > collect statics with an opt-in, you can achieve the same by launching a > counter website. Fine, then according to your "definition," Yum and virtually every web browser are all also spyware, among others. They also send with their requests your hostname/IP information, User-Agent information, timestamp, etc. -- Peter Gordon (codergeek42) This message was sent through a webmail interface, and thus not signed. -- fedora-devel-list mailing list fedora-devel-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-devel-list