spyware - meaning and definition. What is spyware
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What (who) is spyware - definition

MALWARE THAT COLLECTS AND TRANSMITS USER INFORMATION WITHOUT THEIR KNOWLEDGE
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spyware         
<software> (Or "adware") Any type of software that transmits information without the user's knowledge. Information is sent via the Internet to a server somewhere, normally as a hidden side effect of using a program. Gathering this information may benefit the user indirectly, e.g. by helping to improve the software he is using. It may be collected for advertising purposes or, worst of all, to steal security information such as passwords to online accounts or credit card details. Spyware may be installed along with other software or as the result of a virus infection. There are many tools available to locate and remove various forms of spyware from a computer. Some HTTP cookies could be considered as spyware as their use is generally not made explicit to users. It is however possible to disallow them, either totally or individually, and some are actually useful, e.g. recording the fact that a user has logged in. http://spychecker.com/spyware.html. (2004-05-23)
spyware         
¦ noun Computing software that enables a user to obtain covert information about someone's computer activities by transmitting data covertly from their hard drive.
Spyware         
Spyware (a portmanteau for spying software) is software with malicious behavior that aims to gather information about a person or organization and send it to another entity in a way that harms the user—for example, by violating their privacy or endangering their device's security. This behavior may be present in malware as well as in legitimate software.

Wikipedia

Spyware

Spyware (a portmanteau for spying software) is software with malicious behaviour that aims to gather information about a person or organization and send it to another entity in a way that harms the user—for example, by violating their privacy or endangering their device's security. This behaviour may be present in malware as well as in legitimate software. Websites may engage in spyware behaviours like web tracking. Hardware devices may also be affected. Spyware is frequently associated with advertising and involves many of the same issues. Because these behaviors are so common, and can have non-harmful uses, providing a precise definition of spyware is a difficult task.

Examples of use of spyware
1. Three–quarters said they employed anti–spyware tools, but 80 percent said they had dealt with a spyware attack.
2. Next, I run my adware– and spyware–detection software.
3. CNET Labs conducts three separate tests using spyware found to be bundled within free applications rejected by CNET Download.com (as part of its software policies, Download.com does not host applications containing known spyware). In the first test, active detection, CounterSpy 2.0 was the only product to discover all of the spyware; in the second, on–demand test, CounterSpy detected 80 percent of the spyware; and in the final, removal test, CounterSpy removed all traces from 70 percent of the spyware in the test.
4. Another bill would provide protection against spyware intrusion on PCs.
5. Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor Spam and spyware.