EA's Origin Sends Personal Data to Third Parties

Soldier4Real

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Part of Origin's EULA allows Electronic Arts to snoop through your system -- including installed and uninstalled software -- and send that information to third-party service providers.

Honestly EA, what are you up to now? The gaming publisher is currently under fire by outraged consumers after a close examination of the End User License Agreement for Origin reveals that it grants EA the right to snoop through desktops and laptops once the user agrees to the terms. If that wasn't invasive enough, the agreement also allows EA to share all that information to third party service providers.
"You agree that EA may collect, use, store and transmit technical and related information that identifies your computer (including the Internet Protocol Address), operating system, Application usage (including but not limited to successful installation and/or removal), software, software usage and peripheral hardware, that may be gathered periodically to facilitate the provision of software updates, dynamically served content, product support and other services to you, including online services," the agreement reads. "EA may also use this information combined with personal information for marketing purposes and to improve our products and services. We may also share that data with our third party service providers in a form that does not personally identify you. IF YOU DO NOT WANT EA TO COLLECT, USE, STORE, TRANSMIT OR DISPLAY THE DATA DESCRIBED IN THIS SECTION, PLEASE DO NOT INSTALL OR USE THE APPLICATION."

Now here’s the kicker: if EA customers don't agree to the company's snooping and sharing of private data to third parties, then they won't have access to exclusive PC games like Battlefield 3 and Star Wars: The Old Republic. The Origin agreement also doesn't allow the user to opt out at any time after the initial acceptance, meaning that they either must choose to share their personal information indefinitely, or not play EA's exclusive PC games at all.
Reddit is currently rallying EA gamers to contact the company by email or snail mail to protest against the invasion of privacy. According to EA's privacy policy instructions, consumers can first try to settle the matter with the company directly using the contact info at Privacy Contact Info - EA Games. Consumers can also drop an email to the relevant statutory privacy body or advocacy group, presumably the Electronic Frontier Foundation which typically stands up for gamer privacy rights.
Then again, Origin's invasive nature may have been one of the reasons why EA chose to launch its own client in the first place: to see who is pirating EA games... if it indeed scans all installed and uninstalled software on a system, that is.
So far EA hasn't publicly responded to the complaints.

http://www.tomshardware.com/news/Origin-EULA-PC-Gaming-Glorified-Spyware-DRM,13285.html
 
The one thing people didnt realize and overeacted to is the fact that application/software clause is so they can get an idea of what games in origin are played and what the most common hardware is.

Steam already collects this data and publishes it partly to the public and partly to the developers but not wholly to 3rd parties.
 
Yeah, but you have to admit the scope of the statement is very broad.
 
Yeah, but you have to admit the scope of the statement is very broad.

Of course, you wouldnt want to limit yourself or get hammered for changing it later. No matter how well intentioned its EA people would hammer them for asking for your login id j/k. It doesnt sound good initial reaction is uninstall thats for sure.
 
That's pretty sneaky. I've been kinda down on EA since BF2... was getting excited for BF3 but now they are pulling this BS.
 
Anyone taking bets that lulzsec or some other hacking group might hack EA again for this....
 

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So essentially this thing will be able to access your computer specs, installed programs and various other things.....?
 
Anyone taking bets that lulzsec or some other hacking group might hack EA again for this....

well they better hurry up and do it, and if they do it on bf3 launch i will make it my personal goal to hunt them down, i dont care if i have to go door to door..

ot: people read the tos?
 
Anyone taking bets that lulzsec or some other hacking group might hack EA again for this....

"Today in the news Lulzsec has hacked EA and released information on the thousands of EA games people play and what video cards their owners have".
 
V i also just wanted to add cause it hit me. The real shit you dont want out like your credit card info is already on file and isnt in the same database as all this. Digital River is the company responsible for the payment system its the same company microsoft uses for their digital store.
 
V i also just wanted to add cause it hit me. The real shit you dont want out like your credit card info is already on file and isnt in the same database as all this. Digital River is the company responsible for the payment system its the same company microsoft uses for their digital store.

I'm not really concerned about such info (cause I don't keep that stuff on my comp) as I am about having something snooping on what I have installed / unistalled. Incidentally, I just wiped my hard drive and reinstalled, so any programs I had installed before the wipe wouldn't show up on anything EA would see right?
 
The user license doesnt actualy state what they are doing. Im at work anyone care to check valves agreement? They scan your computer for running and installed programs for anti cheat purposes i believe. People are just gonna freak out because this time its ea and they dont know anything about it they just know what it could be. Difference being that ea wants to give it to other companies.
 
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