Gator's EULA Dissected 93
theVP writes "Ben Edelman has recently written up his disassembly of the Gator EULA. He has come across some interesting finds, including the fact that their EULA states that you can't remove their software via 3rd-party means, as well as prohibiting the use of packet sniffers or intercepting the data coming from their software."
Somehow I think/hope... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Somehow I think/hope... (Score:4, Insightful)
You realize that this means even the FBI can't test Gator to see if it snags people's data and sends it "home". Nobody can, legally.
Re:Somehow I think/hope... (Score:2)
That's crap. One FBI agent installs it, another sets up a sniffer on the same network. The guy who installed it (theoretically) can't sniff or capture the packets, but the other guy never agreed to any retarded license.
Not that I believe for a second an EULA is a valid agreement of any kind.
Re:Somehow I think/hope... (Score:2)
Maybe this EULA won't work the way I'm describing, but I'm sure Gator thinks (or hopes) it will. The question was "how can the EULA be enforceable if you don't know you've installed Gator?" and I think I answered that. It's enforcabl
Re:Somehow I think/hope... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Somehow I think/hope... (Score:3, Interesting)
Currently, software companies are skating on the thin ice that the EULA actually gives you permission to load the software into memory (i.e. making a copy of it) and use it - purchasing the box and media the software is stored on does not. So that is the consideration you get for agreeing to the EULA (w
Opportunity for EULA court case? (Score:4, Interesting)
Often times, it's mentioned on /., K5, Fark, etc. that EULAs aren't enforceable as a contract. Would this be a good case for someone to take Gator to court over, since Gator seems to want to restrict a person's ability to use thier computer? Would a judgement against Gator cause other companies to be less restrictive in their EULA terms? Or, would other companies just point and laugh (figuratively) at Gator for getting nailed?
Re:Opportunity for EULA court case? (Score:1)
Re:Opportunity for EULA court case? (Score:3, Interesting)
However, a contract must be agreed to by both parties. If you manage to download software onto my machine without asking, that also means that I didn't get a chance to agree to the EULA. No contract then exists between me and the "vendor".
Well, they may argue that it's not a contract, it's an agreement. But if I didn't agree to it, how is it an agreement?
No matter how you slice it, you aren't bound to a contract/license/agreement that you never even saw, let alone agreed to...
Re:Opportunity for EULA court case? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Opportunity for EULA court case? (Score:1)
EULAs do have their uses, however, since you can slap them on software you release for free with a warning saying it my asplode your computer, use at your own risk and recieve some kind of legal buffer if some company decides that you broke their computers and need to be taken to task.
Exorbitant clause (Score:2)
Prohibiting packet sniffers (Score:3, Interesting)
If programs can prohibit packet-sniffers, then how are users (or researchers or testers or auditors) supposed to confirm whether or not programs are complying with their own privacy policies?
Re:Prohibiting packet sniffers (Score:2)
Re:Prohibiting packet sniffers (Score:2)
Doesn't matter if they do. The EULA to use my LAN is that all packets are statefully inspected for malicious content prior to ingress or egress from the border of the lan to the Internet.
HA I win. My EULA is just as enforcable as yours
-nB
Re:Prohibiting packet sniffers (Score:2)
Re:Prohibiting packet sniffers (Score:2)
Re:Exorbitant clause (Score:3, Interesting)
The "shocking" thing is that they think the clause does anything.
If I wanted to sniff Gator packets, well, I sure as hell wouldn't install it on my machine anyhow. I'd get one of my friends to install it and use it on the local network, and I'd stiff those packets.
I am not bound by the license and as it would be my network I can do whatever sniffing I want. Legally I couldn't "do whatever the hell I wanted" with the data since cop
Re:Exorbitant clause (Score:1)
Elderly unemployed redneck sysadmin!
Re:Exorbitant clause (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Exorbitant clause (Score:1)
IANAL but surely the obvious first response to a breach of the agreement would be for Gator to withold the right to use the software. uhhmmmmm.... fair enough....
Re:Exorbitant clause (Score:2)
Johnny Mnemonic: I'm a dead man if I don't get this out of my head!
Spider: I can get it out.
Johnny Mnemonic: How?
Spider: A cranial drill and a pair of forceps.
Wave link for the visualy challenged [sciflicks.com]
It sums up my experiences with spyware rather nicely I think. To bad my customers become upset when I secure their machines by drilling a hole in the hard drive and install a padlock through the platters.
SD
Next edition of Gator's EULA (Score:4, Funny)
Have a great Gator day!
Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:4, Insightful)
Now angry mobs armed with torches and pitchforks, on the other hand, have nothing to do with the government and I hear they make for some damn fine keggars afterwards.
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:4, Funny)
And for not realizing it's legal to make a left hand turn on red from one one-way street onto another.
And for hanging out in the passing lane on the freeway while people are passing you on the right.
And for being my mother-in-law.
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
<rant>I can understand frustration about slow drivers hanging out in the left lane on freeways that have all of the exits on the right. However, I tend to have people get frustrated at me (driving some approximation of the speed limit) in the left lane on freeways where a left exit is coming up, or even on large city stre
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
(I found this after a little digging; my primary source was an article I read in the Raleigh News & Observer [newsobserver.com] some time ago, but their archive is non-free.
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:2)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1, Offtopic)
I know you were trying to be sardonic, but there's some flaws:
Not unless the vehicle's acceleration factor would cause it to run out of pavement before fully getting up to speed to merge with flowing traffic.
Not in all jurisdictions. Traffic laws can and ofte
It may be illegal to go the speed limit /left lane (Score:1, Offtopic)
Admittedly, the deputy didn't like the looks of our car, was a real moron (unusual in my experience, but this guy was) and let us go after his superior showed up and they had this long talk back by their cars.
The upshot, though
Re:It may be illegal to go the speed limit /left l (Score:1)
two guys took their cars out on the 4-lane hiway near here, took up both east-bound lanes, driving exactly on the speed limit all the way for 67 miles.
they were arrested for obstructing traffic. and they were clocked at exactly 66 miles/hour (the speed limit on that highway)
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Not if the person is driving at or below the speed limit. This one has always been a personal pet-peeve of mine. People assume that the left lane is the fast lane, but not if the vehicle is driving faster then the speed limit.
The operative word here is limit . Those signs with black numbers on white backgrounds don't say speed allow. A limit is a restriction, so therefore a speed limit of 65 MP/h means
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:2)
Every day I see countless lives lost and wasted by assholes who think it's their God given right to speed. Hell, I've got to average 85-90 down 75 just to avoid getting run over. Speed limits aren't for fiscal desires, they are there to save lives.
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:2)
Item #2: In many places, speed limits ARE about fiscal. The national 55 limit was about fuel economy as much as anything, and the last stats *I* saw indicated that traffic deaths had NOT risen as a resul
Re:Death penatly for spyware. (Score:2)
Anything that forwards the progress of human extinction has to be good.
Installation then... (Score:2)
Re:Installation then... (Score:1)
So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
Sounds great, so about switching my company to Linux.....
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:2, Redundant)
Not that you even know you're agreeing to anything in the first place, but if you aren't given the ability to read over a contract before agreeing to it, is it even valid?
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:2)
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
Is that what it would take, some minor contractual quibble over some software you don't really want ?
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
We have a whole host of Internal applications that require IE and Windows so in reality we will not be moving off of it. The point remains however that this garbage and it cousins are the IE/Windows black pelage.
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:2)
but hey, you made a bad choice tying yourself to Windows, pay the price
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
A 100% Windows environment can be secured against the current PLAUGE if we only had a little more support from management. They don't want the users to think the Tech Center is "watching there every online move" when in reality we should be.
By PXE I assume you mean using the Windows Remote Installation Service (which doesn't require PXE complaint NIC's
Re:So what you are telling my is (Score:1)
well, stop moaning about it then
Re:So what you are telling me is. (Score:1)
Never thought I would say this... (Score:2)
If Gator were easy to uninstall, users might not need to resort to third-party removal programs. But Gator makes its software hard to remove. Browse to Add/Remove Programs on a computer with Gator installed, and there's often no entry for Gator. Instead, users are required to identify, find, and remove all programs that bundle Gator, and only then is Gator's software designed to uninstall. This unusual removal procedure -- unique among all programs I've ever encountered -- makes Gator diff
The lack of an Add/Remove entry (Score:3, Interesting)
Certainly Gator claims that Gator is required in exchange for getting Kazaa for free. Whether or not users understand this and meaningfully accept it is another question, of course. If they did, there's a certain persuassive force to Gator's requirement
Re:The lack of an Add/Remove entry (Score:2)
I still feel dirty.
What about kazaa's EULA? (Score:2)
Unless kazaa's EULA stipulates that you can't have it without Gator, they're irrelevant to the discussion. You can't as part of your license put additional riders on other people's licenses. It doesn't work that way
Also of interest: Section headings removed (Score:2, Interesting)
Gator's license, as presented by Kazaa, merges section headings in with body text. No bold type separates section headings from the paragraphs that follow. For that matter, no line breaks separate the headings from the paragraphs. They're just all merged together.
Example:
Re:Also of interest: Section headings removed (Score:1)
Re:Also of interest: Section headings removed (Score:1)
Re:Also of interest: Section headings removed (Score:2)
On the positive side, that should drag the page count of the license down a bit... heh heh.
Re:Also of interest: Section headings removed (Score:1)
Have you seen the old Slashdot page lengthening posts?
Yes. 1 line license! OUCH
hmmm, interesting line in the EULA (Score:1)
Does this mean that we will get fried under the DMCA if we sniff what our personal information is getting sent through the line without our authorization? (CC#, SSN#, etc)?
Re:hmmm, interesting line in the EULA (Score:1)
"You hereby agree not to read this EULA" (Score:3)
Anti-Review Clauses in EULA (Score:3, Informative)
"Judge Orders Software Developer to Remove and Stop Using Deceptive and Restrictive Clauses [state.ny.us]" - NY AG's office
Re:Anti-Review Clauses in EULA (Score:1)
Re:"You hereby agree not to read this EULA" (Score:2)
1. You could not disscuse websites that had forums on the same subject.
2. You could not be mean to people on the board.
3. If you got an email from the sysops about your actions on the board you where not allowed to share it with anyone.
4. You where not allowed to discuss the actions of the sysops in the public forum!
disagree with the EULA (Score:1)
If you dis-agree with the EULA then you are not supposed to run the software. However, you are not given the means to not run the software. This is twisted.
But, since you did NOT agree to teh EULA, and it was put on your system without your permission (illegal unauthorized access, according to the anti-hacking laws, just ask Mitnick) then I don't think the DMCA can apply.
So, now, I can legally dis-assemble the softwa
Re:disagree with the EULA (Score:1)
Re:disagree with the EULA (Score:1)
Of course, I was
Remedy for Gator? (Score:5, Funny)
Great! That's what I want - your crap spyware gone. Now please enforce the EULA.
Re:Remedy for Gator? (Score:1, Funny)
"If you try and remove our software using third party software, we will, uh... remove our software..."
Sniffing.. (Score:1)
No packet sniffing??? (Score:4, Insightful)
They also claim that someone who installs a piece of software on a machine can make anyone else who uses that machine bound by that agreement? How the hell does that work? "By clicking here, your agree your sister will have sex with me" is not a valid license. And if the user wasn't the duly authorized 'owner' of the machine, is their entire license void???
Good god. I completely can't see how any of this shit is legal. Not even remotely. Especially since it piggy-backs its installs with so many other things.
Sheesh. No wonder I do my web surfing on Mozilla on a FreeBSD box behind a firewall. Good luck putting gator on that.
Site is doing OK, actually (Score:1)
I did have to upgrade my hosting plan after the tens of thousands of downloads of my spyware-installed-through-security hole video last week (4MB file!) (see write-up [benedelman.org], slashdot coverage [slashdot.org]). But especially compared to that, this week has been a cakewalk!
How spyware /EULAs might violate the M$ EULA (Score:3, Interesting)
Say like folks who use/subscribe to MSN services( MSN Wallet, bCentral, MSN Shopping, Expedia, MSN Maps, MSN Music, etc) or the application services (Passport, Messenger, Encarta, Money, MSN Toobar, Mappoint, Streets and Trips, Picturte It, Windows Media, etc, etc..), can there not be conflicts between Gator's EULA and any of these M$ product EULAs and servcies websites terms of use for the data they collect and claim "ownership" to?
It would seem Microsoft could gain some ground with users if, instead of focusing on attacking Open Source products and their infringement on M$ EULA, to target the compainies exploiting the vulnerabilities of their software and it's users, aka GATOR. Everyone would cheer that effort.
Re:How spyware /EULAs might violate the M$ EULA (Score:2)
Anyone know where I can get Gator for FreeBSD? (Score:1)
Legality is questionable...at best. (Score:2)
For one thing, I don't know about the legality of most EULA's as a whole. They certainly -might- be workable, but certainly some have been struck down as invalid, and rightfully so.
"By installing and using X software package, you agree that every time you type in a credit card number to your system, X software package's keylogger will transmit this data to X developer. You further agree to let X developer use this information to make all the purchases he damn well likes."
While this may seem an extreme exa