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posted by martyb on Friday November 25 2016, @03:52PM   Printer-friendly
from the we're-not-really-watching-you... dept.

Microsoft is now selling third-parties access to its Windows 10 telemetry data via subscription.

Microsoft struck a deal with security company FireEye recently according to a report on Australian news magazin[e] Arn [sic] which gives FireEye access to all Windows 10 Telemetry data.

The report states that FireEye in return will provide Microsoft with the company's iSIGHT Intelligence software for Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection on Windows 10 devices.

[...] Windows Defender is built-in to Windows 10 and enabled by default unless other security software is recognized by the operating system.

[...] The news article suggests that the partnership benefits Microsoft, and specifically the reputation and credibility of the commercial version of Windows Defender.

A press release by FireEye on November 3, 2016 provides additional details on the deal. The company's iSIGHT Intelligence software is available through Windows Defender Advanced Threat Protection (WDATP) but not the free version of Windows Defender.

WDATP customers gain access to several technical indicators that are provided by the software. These include the main motivation of the attacker, related tools, information about target sectors and geographies, and a description of the actor and operation.

According to the report on ARN, security teams may also get their hands on Windows 10 Telemetry data via subscription billing models.

Third-parties will get access to telemetry data of all Windows 10 devices. An overview of what that may include is provided on this Technet page.

Neither FireEye, Microsoft or ARN reveal details on the range of Telemetry data that FireEye gains access to.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 25 2016, @08:29PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 25 2016, @08:29PM (#432987)

    Don't like your options? You are free the write your own. You may not be as talented as an autistic Chinaman but that hasn't stopped you before, has it?

  • (Score: 1) by Ethanol-fueled on Friday November 25 2016, @09:30PM

    by Ethanol-fueled (2792) on Friday November 25 2016, @09:30PM (#433002) Homepage

    Meh. Probably just resign myself to gutting and rearranging an existing distro, then imaging. Why code or roll from scratch when I could use relics from back when Linux devs got things right?

    • (Score: 2) by gottabeme on Sunday November 27 2016, @11:27PM

      by gottabeme (1531) on Sunday November 27 2016, @11:27PM (#433817)

      No need for relics, KDE 3.5 lives on in the form of TDE. Latest release came out a couple weeks ago. Try it, it's great. Using it on Jessie. It's like the good old days, except today! I can dig up my old desktop screenshots from 10 years ago and make my current desktop look just like it! I even donated some money to the project, because I'm so thankful that someone is keeping the original KDE vision alive, i.e. making software that is useful, and keeping it working rather than turning it into a toy project and ripping out working code. :)