You are a WIRETAPPING 'service' designed to spy on people to make money for YOU with no benefit for the users who's browsing habits your are SPYING on.
END OF STORY - leave BT - if you ever see Webwise or Phorm any other 'odd' initial page when you start browsing the web - change ISP - they are spying on you and getting paid for the data they collect on your browsing habits!
Do the people behind you, who appear on every one of you YouTube postings, ever do anything?
Are they posting disinformation on Forums, editing Wikipedia, checking Phorms share price (probably, they do look suicidal), are they from one of the three PR firms you have had to hire to attempt spin? (NOTE: we are very aware of spin, and it is certainly more easy to detect than your previous attempts at spyware under the guise of 121Media).
The numbers can not be random. If they are random then two people can have the same number. Clearly that can not happen or you will be taking advertisers money under false pretences.
But if the interception software itself gets hacked and attacker's code inserted, it's going to be open season on credit cards, right? No wonder the banks are moving liability for Internet-related credit card fraud to the users - they probably saw this potential threat coming a mile away. Yes, you may try to stop it happening but you've introduced a point of leverage for hackers. Do you choose not to see this? You only addressed the stored data here. Why evasive about this other aspect?
You are a WIRETAPPING 'service' designed to spy on people to make money for YOU with no benefit for the users who's browsing habits your are SPYING on.
END OF STORY - leave BT - if you ever see Webwise or Phorm any other 'odd' initial page when you start browsing the web - change ISP - they are spying on you and getting paid for the data they collect on your browsing habits!
krona2006 3 years ago
Do the people behind you, who appear on every one of you YouTube postings, ever do anything?
Are they posting disinformation on Forums, editing Wikipedia, checking Phorms share price (probably, they do look suicidal), are they from one of the three PR firms you have had to hire to attempt spin? (NOTE: we are very aware of spin, and it is certainly more easy to detect than your previous attempts at spyware under the guise of 121Media).
Share price is down again, I see...
StopSpyingOnUsKent 3 years ago
A Prvacy Revolution?
That's rich coming from the guy responsible for developing the Apropos Rootkit Virus!
pauldelaney17 3 years ago
The numbers can not be random. If they are random then two people can have the same number. Clearly that can not happen or you will be taking advertisers money under false pretences.
huberthuzzah 3 years ago
But if the interception software itself gets hacked and attacker's code inserted, it's going to be open season on credit cards, right? No wonder the banks are moving liability for Internet-related credit card fraud to the users - they probably saw this potential threat coming a mile away. Yes, you may try to stop it happening but you've introduced a point of leverage for hackers. Do you choose not to see this? You only addressed the stored data here. Why evasive about this other aspect?
TimelessPrototype 3 years ago
The random number is stored on a users PC.
Once the Government has their PC they can recover the cookie ID, get the data and then match the categories to that user.
This is still data they wouldn't have if you hadn't intercepted that users private browsing.
Collecting data can never offer more privacy than not collecting it in the first place.
badphorm,co,uk
MattHawkinsUK 3 years ago