Lenovo has settled with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and I Want To Be The First Guy32 states over charges related to malicious Superfish adware that came pre-installed on laptops from Aug. 2014 to Feb. 2015 — but the company still won't admit it did anything wrong.
The Chinese computer maker was found to be shipping computers with Superfish adware, a program called VisualDiscovery, back in Feb. 2015. The company was hit with consumer backlash and the Department of Homeland Security even advised users to delete the software after the initial discovery of the security breach, but this settlement is the first concrete consequence for putting the personal information of users in danger.
Lenovo agreed to pay a fine of $3.5 million and will implement a comprehensive security program for "most consumer software" preloaded on its computers for the next 20 years, which will be subject to audit. Lenovo will also be required to get consumers’ affirmative consent before pre-installing software like this on its computers going forward.
The major concern for the researchers who discovered the security flaws back in 2015 was that the program broke HTTPS connections, exposing users to potentially malicious websites and attacks by hackers when they visited otherwise secure sites online. The FTC also claims that the adware was able to access users' personal data, but none of that data was ever sent to Superfish.
Lenovo isn't totally owning up to the charges, however. The company "disagrees with allegations contained in these complaints," according to a statement — even though Lenovo CTO Peter Hortensius admitted to Mashabletwo years ago that the adware created a security vulnerability for users.
The company insists that there have been no incidents where anyone actually took advantage of the vulnerabilities, and that its response to beef up its security and limit the amount of bloatware it preloads onto PCs afterwards was sufficient.
By settling, Lenovo gets to close the the controversy with little more than a slap on the wrist. The Superfish adware saga might not have led to anyone's data being stolen — but it did expose what computer makers can get away with when they put your data at risk.
Topics Cybersecurity Lenovo
Faulkner’s Outlines, and Other News by Sadie SteinWhat We’re Loving: Illuminations and Despair by The Paris ReviewR.I.P. Mr. Merker, and Other News by Sadie SteinBe Forever Falling by Evan JamesConsider the Foul by Adam SobseyPinning Down: A Conversation with Catrin Morgan by Daisy AtterburyTatiana Salem Levy, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil by Matteo PericoliTom Hanks Hoards Typewriters, and Other News by Ellen DufferMr. Men as Social Critique by Sadie SteinIn the Beginning by Sadie SteinPoetry Gone to Pieces: Talking Civilization with Dana Crum by Dorian RolstonHave You Ever Heard Virginia Woolf Speak?Choose Your Own Adventure: Author Edition by Sadie SteinOn its way to the moon, Russia beams back first mission imagesSome Sort of Alchemy by Albert MobilioDiamonds Are Forever by Adam PlunkettWhat We’re Loving: Foot Juggling, Dancing, and Coregasms by The Paris ReviewNobel Tweets, and Other News by Sadie SteinPhilip Roth Reads “In Memory of a Friend, Teacher and Mentor” by Sadie SteinThe Town of Books by Sadie Stein Snapchat's animated Bitmoji feature means we can all finally live like Lizzie McGuire Facial recognition company says it did not provide proof that antifa stormed the Capitol Cobra Kai Season 3 review: Netflix series delivers kickass fun Twitter finally removes Trump video it labeled as a 'risk of violence' Elf on the Shelf has become a rhyming, ridiculous meme Dude crashes his parachute in a packed stadium of football fans Samsung's new $156,000 TV comes with a solar Meanwhile, President Obama is hanging out with Diddy Nickelodeon's NFL team 6 huge award show mishaps that were as bad as Sean Spicer at the Emmys Doting boxer cares for eight needy piglets as her own See the number of U.S. COVID Apple is reportedly working on two foldable iPhone models Everything you need to know about 'WandaVision' Apple's threat to kick Parler off the App Store may have backfired Facebook belatedly removes Trump video falsely claiming election 'was stolen' Brilliant Hubble photos show colliding galaxies How to gameshare on PS5 Elon Musk's endorsement of Signal is causing the good kind of problems Chrissy Teigen uses Twitter to get John Legend to pick up the phone
2.5091s , 8201.84375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【I Want To Be The First Guy】,Unobstructed Information Network