This was on the front page of today's nnew York Times
kelly
March 7, 1999
Microsoft to Alter Software in Response to Privacy Concerns
By JOHN MARKOFF
SAN FRANCISCO -- The Microsoft Corporation moved to defuse a
potentially explosive privacy issue today, saying it would modify a
feature of its Windows 98 operating system that has been quietly
used to create a vast data base of personal information about
computer users.
Microsoft conceded that the feature, a unique identifying number
used by Windows and other Microsoft products, had the potential to
be far more invasive than a traceable serial number in the Intel
Corporation's new Pentium III that has privacy advocates up in
arms. The difference is that the Windows number is tied to an
individual's name, to identifying numbers on the hardware in his
computer and even to documents that he creates.
The combination of the Windows number with all these data, the
company said, could result in the ability to track a single user
and the documents he created across vast computer networks. Hackers
could compromise the resulting data base, or subpoenas might allow
authorities to gain access to information that would otherwise
remain private and unavailable. Privacy advocates fear that
availability will lead to abuses.
"We're definitely sensitive to any privacy concerns," Robert
Bennett, Microsoft's group product manager for Windows, said.
"The software was not supposed to send this information unless the
computer user checked a specific option."
Mr. Bennett said the option to collect the information had been
added to the software so that Microsoft support employees would be
able to help users diagnose problems with their computers more
accurately. He said the Redmond, Wash., software giant had never
intended to use the data for marketing purposes.
In response to a complaint from a software programmer in
Massachusetts, Microsoft will not only alter the way the
registration program works in the next maintenance release of
Windows 98, Mr. Bennett said. He said Microsoft technicians would
look through the company's data bases and expunge information that
had been improperly collected as a result of earlier versions.
The company is also exploring the possibility of creating a free
utility program that would make it possible for Windows users to
delete the serial number information from a small data base in the
part of Windows system known as the registry, where it is now
collected.
Microsoft has been discussing the issue with a Cambridge, Mass.,
programmer who contacted the company earlier this week after
discovering that the Microsoft Office business software was
creating unique numbers identifying a user's personal computer and
embedding them in spreadsheet and word processing documents.
The programmer, Robert M. Smith, who is the president of Phar Lap
Software Inc., a software tools development company, told the
company that he believed the practice created a potential threat to
privacy.
Microsoft officials said earlier this week that the numbers
generated by the company's software were part of an effort to keep
different components from interfering with each other in an
increasingly complex world of networked computers.
However, Mr. Smith said that the number, in effect, created a
"digital fingerprint" that could be used to match a document
created by a word processing or spreadsheet program with a
particular computer.
On Thursday, after further studying the "registration wizard" --
the software module that enables customers to register their copies
of Windows 98 operating system for support and updates -- Mr. Smith
discovered that the number, known as a Globally Unique Identifier,
was being transmitted to Microsoft as part of a list of
registration information that generally includes the owner's name,
address, phone number and other demographic information as well as
details about the hardware and software on or attached to the
user's computer.
"Microsoft never asked me if it was O.K. to send in this number,
and they never said it was being sent," Mr. Smith said. "They are
apparently building a data base that relates Ethernet adapter
addresses to personal information."
Ethernet adapters are cards inserted in a personal computer that
enable it to connect to high-speed networks within organizations
and through them to the Internet.
The controversy erupted just weeks after Intel, maker of the most
widely used processors for machines that use the Windows operating
system, agreed to make it possible for computer manufacturers to
set its new Pentium III computer chip so that a serial number on
the chip would not be recorded without the computer user's
permission.
Privacy activists have been attacking both companies, arguing that
identification numbers can be easily misused to create electronic
monitoring systems. Such systems could track a computer user's
behavior in cyberspace or create dossiers of personal information
about individuals.
The issue has sparked a heated debate over the fundamental
technology of modern computer networks and software systems, which
routinely employ serial numbers to identify individual computers
and software modules, known as "objects," that can be shared by a
number of programs.
But the Intel number only identified a computer. The Windows number
identifies a person. And because the Windows number created a
potential linkage between individuals and confidential documents
they created, privacy advocates said they were outraged.
"I think this is horrendous," said Jason Catlett, president of
Junkbusters, a consumer privacy organization based in Greenbrook,
N.J. "They're tattooing a number into each file. Think of the
implications. If some whistle blower sends a file, it can be traced
back to the person himself. It's an extremely dangerous feature.
Why did they do it?"
Privacy groups have long warned about the dangers of centralized
information and of monitoring electronic behavior. The groups have
been discussing the implications of the serial number on the
Pentium III with Intel, and while some privacy advocates
acknowledge that the number can play an important role in
protecting both privacy and security, others have called for a
boycott of Intel, arguing that the likelihood of misuse of the
number outweighs its benefits.
Beyond the fear of a centralized Big Brother, they add that the
rise of the Internet has made it possible for individual companies
to freely use detailed personal information for commercial ends.
"The problem is the absence of legal rules that limit the
collection and use of personal information," said Marc Rotenberg,
director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in
Washington.
"It's clear to me that large Internet companies such as Microsoft,
AOL and Netscape will try to squeeze out privacy."
Microsoft executives said on Friday evening that they had developed
the feature for technical reasons related to the need to
distinguish between millions of different hardware and software
objects on the Internet. They said they had never considered the
privacy implications.
According to Microsoft software engineers, the roots of the
company's numbering system go back to a system developed by
computer researchers at the Open Software Foundation in Cambridge
in the early 1990's.
In an effort to develop technology that would enable computer
systems to communicate across a network, a numbering system known
as a Universally Unique Identifier, or UUID, was established as
part of a software standard known as the Distributed Computing
Environment, or DCE. Microsoft relied on this standard when it
developed a remote computing capability for Windows known as Object
Linking and Embedding, or OLE.
The company's designers changed UUID to GUID, for Globally Unique
Identifier, and that term is now widely used by software
applications.
For example, the GUID is used in setting "cookies" -- files that
World Wide Web sites send to a visitor's hard drive to identify the
user later and to track his or her travels through the Web.
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