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Rent-to-own PCs captured users' most intimate moments

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Seven rent-to-own companies and a software developer have settled federal charges that they used spyware to monitor the locations, passwords, and other intimate details of more than 420,000 customers who leased computers.

The software, known as PC Rental Agent, was developed by Pennsylvania-based DesignerWare. It was licensed by more than 1,617 rent-to-own stores in the US, Canada, and Australia to report the physical location of rented PCs. A feature known as Detective Mode also allowed licensees to surreptitiously monitor the activities of computer users. Managers of rent-to-own stores could use the feature to turn on webcams so anyone in front of the machine would secretly be recorded. Managers could also use the software to log keystrokes and take screen captures.

"In numerous instances, data gathered by Detective Mode has revealed private, confidential, and personal details about the computer user," officials with the Federal Trade Commission wrote in a civil complaint filed earlier this year. "For example, keystroke logs have displayed usernames and passwords for access to e-mail accounts, social media websites, and financial institutions."

In some cases, webcam activations captured images of children, individuals not fully clothed, and people engaged in sexual activities, the complaint alleged. Rental agreements never disclosed the information that was collected, FTC lawyers said.

PC Rental Agent also had the capability to display fake registration pages for Microsoft Windows, Internet Explorer, Microsoft Office, and Yahoo Messenger. When customers entered their names, addresses, and other personal information in the forms, the data was sent to DesignerWare servers and then e-mailed to the rent-to-own licensees.

In addition to DesignerWare, the FTC action named Billings, Montana-based Aspen Way Inc.; Russellville, Kentucky-based B Stamper Enterprises, which operated under the name Premier Rental Purchase; Nashville, Tennessee-based C.A.L.M. Ventures Inc., which also operated under the name Premier Rental Purchase; Tampa, Florida-based J.A.G. Rents, which operated under the name ColorTyme; Dallas, Texas-based Red Zone Investment Group, which also operated under the name ColorTyme; Marion, Ohio-based Showplace Inc., which operated under the name Showplace Rent-to-Own and Showplace Lease/Purchase; and Lake Bluff, Illinois-based Watershed Development Corp., which operated under the names Watershed and Aaron’s Sales & Lease Ownership.

Under the proposed settlement, the defendants agreed to curb data-collecting software on rental PCs and also to stop using deception to gather any information from consumers. The settlement is subject to public comment for 30 days, after which the FTC will decide whether to make it final.

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Sursa: Rent-to-own PCs surreptitiously captured users’ most intimate moments | Ars Technica

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