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Comment by gigel82

1 month ago

Got it, so if Windows Defender (that is enabled by default on all Windows PCs) pushes an update that scans all your files on all connected drives and uploads hashes to the mothership, enables this by default and proceeds to execute the scan and upload immediately after update, but also includes a setting that lets you turn it off when you find out about its existence from some 3rd party article, that is all perfectly fine? (since there is no subterfuge)

> Got it

Clearly you have not. If you did, you wouldn’t continue to give an example which is not equivalent.

No, it would not be “perfectly fine”, I just said it wouldn’t. You can do something wrong without it being a cover up.