Zainstaluj Steam
zaloguj się
|
język
简体中文 (chiński uproszczony)
繁體中文 (chiński tradycyjny)
日本語 (japoński)
한국어 (koreański)
ไทย (tajski)
български (bułgarski)
Čeština (czeski)
Dansk (duński)
Deutsch (niemiecki)
English (angielski)
Español – España (hiszpański)
Español – Latinoamérica (hiszpański latynoamerykański)
Ελληνικά (grecki)
Français (francuski)
Italiano (włoski)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonezyjski)
Magyar (węgierski)
Nederlands (niderlandzki)
Norsk (norweski)
Português (portugalski – Portugalia)
Português – Brasil (portugalski brazylijski)
Română (rumuński)
Русский (rosyjski)
Suomi (fiński)
Svenska (szwedzki)
Türkçe (turecki)
Tiếng Việt (wietnamski)
Українська (ukraiński)
Zgłoś problem z tłumaczeniem
Yes, even if you already are a paying customer they still did this nonsense.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/01/10/avira_ethereum/
https://www.safetydetectives.com/blog/avast-scandal-why-we-stopped-recommending-avast-avg/
https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy/antivirus-company-avast-closes-analytics-company-over-data-privacy-scandal/
Apparently AVG is a subsidiary of Avast now so yeah.... >_>
There were rumors and hints that Kaspersky has been subject to and providing user data to the Russian govt which is why they were blacklisted from the US entirely. As for whether or not this is true you can dig around for yourself.
Although just saying all these spyware components installed when playing Chinese gacha games on PC do the same thing of masquerading as anti-cheat then selling data while reporting to the Chinese govt.
And remember kids, it's not just a theory, it is an actual conspiracy. Learn the difference ;)
At this rate I would hope a country like Switzerland (the most privacy-focused country in the world) would have a local company start offering privacy-focused antivirus for a change. Maybe. Hopefully.