What Is adware?
1)
Generically, adware (spelled all lower case) is any software application
in which advertising banners are displayed while the program is
running. The authors of these applications include additional code
that delivers the ads, which can be viewed through pop-up windows
or through a bar that appears on a computer screen. The justification
for adware is that it helps recover programming development cost
and helps to hold down the cost for the user.
Adware
has been criticized because it usually includes code that tracks
a user's personal information and passes it on to third parties,
without the user's authorization or knowledge. This practice has
been dubbed spyware and has prompted an outcry from computer security
and privacy advocates, including the Electronic Privacy Information
Center.
Noted
privacy software expert Steve Gibson of Gibson Research explains:
"Spyware is any software (that)
employs a user's Internet connection in the background (the so-called
'backchannel') without their knowledge or explicit permission. Silent
background use of an Internet 'backchannel' connection must be preceded
by a complete and truthful disclosure of proposed backchannel usage,
followed by the receipt of explicit, informed consent for such use.
Any software communicating across the Internet absent of these elements
is guilty of information theft and is properly and rightfully termed:
Spyware."
A number
of software applications, including Ad-Aware and OptOut (by Gibson's
company), are available as freeware to help computer users search
for and remove suspected spyware programs.
2)
AdWare is also a registered trademark that belongs to AdWare Systems,
Inc. AdWare Systems builds accounting and media buying systems for
the advertising industry and has no connection to pop-up advertising,
spyware, or other invasive forms of online advertising.
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