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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Apparently there is an issue with the Geek Squad at Best Buy viewing
personal files on computers. It seems that customers who have left their personal computers to be serviced are concerned about unauthorized viewing of pictures, information and other files. If you check out https://www.lawyersandsettlements.co...buy_geek_squad they have the information on this as well as what can be done about it. There is a free case evaluation provided for those who may have experienced such an issue. I thought this was interesting and hope that it might be of some help. kr0 |
#2
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kr0 wrote:
Apparently there is an issue with the Geek Squad at Best Buy viewing personal files on computers. It seems that customers who have left their personal computers to be serviced are concerned about unauthorized viewing of pictures, information and other files. If you check out https://www.lawyersandsettlements.co...buy_geek_squad they have the information on this as well as what can be done about it. There is a free case evaluation provided for those who may have experienced such an issue. I thought this was interesting and hope that it might be of some help. kr0 I'm not sure what the surprise is, you'd be hard pressed to find a computer repair shop where the techs don't poke around a little. That's why it's common sense to remove sensitive data from a PC before taking it in for service. |
#3
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![]() "James Sweet" wrote in message news:Lofcf.23244$ip6.22966@trnddc07... kr0 wrote: Apparently there is an issue with the Geek Squad at Best Buy viewing personal files on computers. It seems that customers who have left their personal computers to be serviced are concerned about unauthorized viewing of pictures, information and other files. If you check out https://www.lawyersandsettlements.co...buy_geek_squad they have the information on this as well as what can be done about it. There is a free case evaluation provided for those who may have experienced such an issue. I thought this was interesting and hope that it might be of some help. kr0 I'm not sure what the surprise is, you'd be hard pressed to find a computer repair shop where the techs don't poke around a little. That's why it's common sense to remove sensitive data from a PC before taking it in for service. That's assuming the fault doesn't prevent removal of data. After all, most people only take one in for service when there is no choice (e.g., it won't boot) and they can't even access their hard drives. If the HD is accessible, the customer could remove it before service, but a lot of folks don't feel comfortable doing this with a desktop, much less a laptop. If that isn't bad enough, a customer can't remove sensitive data if the very reason they're submitting the unit is for data retrieval (e.g., IDE drive crash requiring a board swap). The only ways to prevent techs from snooping in this case is for the customer to do the repair him/herself or look over the tech's shoulder while their HD is being fixed. Most customers won't bother attempting such a repair and I'm certain there aren't many techs who would agree to the latter. That's why you must always remember to regularly BACKUP all your important stuff, people! BACK IT UP or prepare to be devastated -- or at least paranoid about snooping -- when your hard drive bites it. |
#4
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What a surprise... Geek Squad employees have to spend at least 7.5 of their
8 hour day doing something halfway constructive. The last half hour they use shining up the Volkswagen. As far as I'm concerned any info on a computer that's taken to a repair shop is open and fair game. It's the responsibility of the computer owner to back up and delete sensitive data and totally their fault if they do not. How do you think most folks get caught and serve jail time for illegal porn? kr0 wrote: Apparently there is an issue with the Geek Squad at Best Buy viewing personal files on computers. It seems that customers who have left their personal computers to be serviced are concerned about unauthorized viewing of pictures, information and other files. |
#5
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![]() "sonyfunai" wrote in message ... What a surprise... Geek Squad employees have to spend at least 7.5 of their 8 hour day doing something halfway constructive. The last half hour they use shining up the Volkswagen. As far as I'm concerned any info on a computer that's taken to a repair shop is open and fair game. It's the responsibility of the computer owner to back up and delete sensitive data and totally their fault if they do not. How do you think most folks get caught and serve jail time for illegal porn? Not sure about most, but it seems a great MANY are just plain stupid -- they use their own valid credit cards to pay for memberships/downloads on illegal sites! Gee, I wonder if the feds might just be monitoring such transactions. =o |
#6
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sonyfunai wrote:
What a surprise... Geek Squad employees have to spend at least 7.5 of their 8 hour day doing something halfway constructive. The last half hour they use shining up the Volkswagen. As far as I'm concerned any info on a computer that's taken to a repair shop is open and fair game. It's the responsibility of the computer owner to back up and delete sensitive data and totally their fault if they do not. How do you think most folks get caught and serve jail time for illegal porn? IIRC, most shops have it in the fine print that they're in no way responsible for the integrity or security of your data, it may get wiped out if they forat the drive and reinstall the OS to fix the problem or it may get snooped, it's a risk you agree to take by bringing the machine into a shop. You can of course hire a tech to come to your house and work on it in your presense, at a correspondingly higher price. |
#7
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I don't know how prevalent it is. We don't do it at our shop.
None of our techs have the time to waste, and we respect our customers' privacy. Every time I read about someone getting prosecuted for something found on his computer by a repair technician, I wonder about the stupidity of the perpetrator, and the integrity of the technician. While snooping around invading the privacy of his customer, he found something that morally outraged him enough to report it. It's awfully hypocritical. The only time you have to look at user's files is if they ask you to recover data, and in that case they'd expect you to be looking at it. James Sweet wrote: I'm not sure what the surprise is, you'd be hard pressed to find a computer repair shop where the techs don't poke around a little. That's why it's common sense to remove sensitive data from a PC before taking it in for service. |
#8
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On Wed, 09 Nov 2005 01:20:20 GMT, "kr0" wrote:
Apparently there is an issue with the Geek Squad at Best Buy viewing personal files on computers. It seems that customers who have left their personal computers to be serviced are concerned about unauthorized viewing of pictures, information and other files. If you check out https://www.lawyersandsettlements.co...buy_geek_squad they have the information on this as well as what can be done about it. There is a free case evaluation provided for those who may have experienced such an issue. I thought this was interesting and hope that it might be of some help. Lovely. Quoteing the complaint: Allegations include unauthorized viewing of personal files, information and pictures while the computers are left with the Geek Squad resulting in embarrassment, breach of confidentiality, and fear of dissemination of personal information. Note that embarrassment is probably self-embarrassment, breach of confidence is not actionable, and fear of dissemination doesn't indicate that any dissemination took place. In other words, just looking at the customers data is apparently the complaint. No actual damage, embarrassment, or disclosure has taken place. Smells like a fishing expedition. Geek Squad privacy policy: http://www.geeksquad.com/privacy/ Nothing on customers computer privacy issues. It's impossible to untrash a Windoze machine without looking at the files and programs installed on a machine. I run into machines full of porno all the time. It's amazingly common. I don't look for it, but it's hard to miss during scans, backups, updates, and config exercises. I saw a potential problem with testing programs after a repair job. For example, running MS Word or Excel and opening the most recently used document is the way I usually test for MS Office problems. If it's some kind of embarrassing document, the customer will see what I've been looked at in the MRU history list. This worries me for the same reasons that the Geek Squad is being "investigated" so I usually erase the MRU's and clean up Windoze with: http://www.ccleaner.com or any of the multitude of cleanup software available. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#9
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Yeah, and the motophoto clerks never looked at the photos
they were processing or made copies of the ... interesting ones. Your equivocation would make Bush proud. They have no business looking at the data. End of story. If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. Jeff Liebermann wrote: Note that embarrassment is probably self-embarrassment, breach of confidence is not actionable, and fear of dissemination doesn't indicate that any dissemination took place. In other words, just looking at the customers data is apparently the complaint. No actual damage, embarrassment, or disclosure has taken place. Smells like a fishing expedition. |
#10
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Mike Berger wrote in news:dkt5ui$6cp$2
@roundup.shout.net: *snip* They have no business looking at the data. End of story. If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. In some repairs, it is necessary to look at a customer's files (or at least a file on their computer) to verify the repair was done properly. As a tech, you should be aware of this and try to determine if such a thing would be necessary and ask permission before hand. "You have a problem with Office crashing when you open files? What documents can I look at to attempt to fix this problem?" This debate is actually YEARS old, I remember reading guidelines that said something to the extent of "If you find it necessary to view a customer's files, you should keep whatever's in the file to yourself." Puckdropper -- www.uncreativelabs.net Old computers are getting to be a lost art. Here at Uncreative Labs, we still enjoy using the old computers. Sometimes we want to see how far a particular system can go, other times we use a stock system to remind ourselves of what we once had. To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm |
#11
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On Wed, 9 Nov 2005 17:47:57 +0000 (UTC), Puckdropper
wrote: Mike Berger wrote in news:dkt5ui$6cp$2 : *snip* They have no business looking at the data. End of story. If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. In some repairs, it is necessary to look at a customer's files (or at least a file on their computer) to verify the repair was done properly. As a tech, you should be aware of this and try to determine if such a thing would be necessary and ask permission before hand. "You have a problem with Office crashing when you open files? What documents can I look at to attempt to fix this problem?" Why can't the technician use his own documents? Tom This debate is actually YEARS old, I remember reading guidelines that said something to the extent of "If you find it necessary to view a customer's files, you should keep whatever's in the file to yourself." Puckdropper |
#12
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Tom MacIntyre wrote in
: Why can't the technician use his own documents? Tom In some cases, this is possible. In other cases, the problem is related to the document and/or the location of it. There may be 50 ways to accomplish the same task (in this case fix the computer), but only one way to do so easily and/or properly. Puckdropper -- www.uncreativelabs.net Old computers are getting to be a lost art. Here at Uncreative Labs, we still enjoy using the old computers. Sometimes we want to see how far a particular system can go, other times we use a stock system to remind ourselves of what we once had. To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm |
#13
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Puckdropper wrote:
Mike Berger wrote in news:dkt5ui$6cp$2 @roundup.shout.net: *snip* They have no business looking at the data. End of story. If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. I never said it was ethical, or even legal, but to assume it doesn't happen is sticking one's head in the sand. A number of my friends worked as computer techs in places like Best Buy, CompUSA, etc when we were in highschool and most of the other techs were low paid teenagers too, kids do that sort of thing. |
#14
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On Wed, 09 Nov 2005 09:51:46 -0600, Mike Berger
wrote: Yeah, and the motophoto clerks never looked at the photos they were processing or made copies of the ... interesting ones. Your equivocation would make Bush proud. I don't consider testing MS Office to be equivocation. Would you suggest I open my own test files from a cdrom or network server instead? Perhaps you also don't look at the list of programs installed in Add/Remove Software. Maybe you also don't bother to check what's starting is MSCONFIG. If the disk is rather full, I'm sure your busy techs don't bother checking what's hogging all the diskspace. Naturally, you don't bother to test if their email is functioning. Surly, you would consider checking the virus and spyware scanner log files for past infections an invasion of privacy. Yeah, privacy is so important that it justified returning the machine half fixed and untested. The problem I have is that I'll get a phone call a few weeks or sometimes months later asking if I had erased some file of theirs, or perhaps retained a backup copy. They have no business looking at the data. End of story. Well, W2K and XP Pro have EFS (Encrypted File Services). If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? The original complaint did not mention anything about disclosure on the part of the Geek Squad. Did you find any information that indicates that there had been a disclosure of customers information? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. Assumption again. Got any evidence or examples of disclosure? I'm not so sure if absolute non-disclosure is possible. If the Geek Squad finds a file sharing program, with an open DSL connection, possibly run by a trojan horse program, and the customer is complaining that their internet connection is slow, it would be necessary to inform them of the problem and ask if they wanted it removed or if file sharing was their primary activity. It might be possible to investigate the problem and remove the programs involved without looking at what was being downloaded, but I doubt it. When I've run into such situations, I burn a DVD of the downloaded files for the customer, and remove the whole mess. If I goofed and they actually wanted to run a file sharing system, then they can re-install it themselves. This is fairly mild compared to what some manufacturers will do with warranty returns. Reformatting the hard disk and restoring it to original manufacturers condition is quite common. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
#15
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We fix computers and computer problems, not Windows.
We consider Windows issues to be an entirely different class of problems. And problems running applications or opening a particular file are not the kind of problem people take to technicians. Who sends their computer to Best Buy for a problem with an Office document? Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Wed, 09 Nov 2005 09:51:46 -0600, Mike Berger wrote: Yeah, and the motophoto clerks never looked at the photos they were processing or made copies of the ... interesting ones. Your equivocation would make Bush proud. I don't consider testing MS Office to be equivocation. Would you suggest I open my own test files from a cdrom or network server instead? Perhaps you also don't look at the list of programs installed in Add/Remove Software. Maybe you also don't bother to check what's starting is MSCONFIG. If the disk is rather full, I'm sure your busy techs don't bother checking what's hogging all the diskspace. Naturally, you don't bother to test if their email is functioning. Surly, you would consider checking the virus and spyware scanner log files for past infections an invasion of privacy. Yeah, privacy is so important that it justified returning the machine half fixed and untested. The problem I have is that I'll get a phone call a few weeks or sometimes months later asking if I had erased some file of theirs, or perhaps retained a backup copy. They have no business looking at the data. End of story. Well, W2K and XP Pro have EFS (Encrypted File Services). If they are poking around in customer's files where they don't belong, why should anybody believe they'd have the integrity to keep the information to themselves? The original complaint did not mention anything about disclosure on the part of the Geek Squad. Did you find any information that indicates that there had been a disclosure of customers information? And if they're sharing with other technicians, they clearly don't. Assumption again. Got any evidence or examples of disclosure? I'm not so sure if absolute non-disclosure is possible. If the Geek Squad finds a file sharing program, with an open DSL connection, possibly run by a trojan horse program, and the customer is complaining that their internet connection is slow, it would be necessary to inform them of the problem and ask if they wanted it removed or if file sharing was their primary activity. It might be possible to investigate the problem and remove the programs involved without looking at what was being downloaded, but I doubt it. When I've run into such situations, I burn a DVD of the downloaded files for the customer, and remove the whole mess. If I goofed and they actually wanted to run a file sharing system, then they can re-install it themselves. This is fairly mild compared to what some manufacturers will do with warranty returns. Reformatting the hard disk and restoring it to original manufacturers condition is quite common. |
#16
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On Thu, 10 Nov 2005 10:17:07 -0600, Mike Berger
wrote: We fix computers and computer problems, not Windows. We consider Windows issues to be an entirely different class of problems. I do whatever the customer needs and wants. That includes cleaning the machine, applications issues, updates, hand-holding, remote admin, and of course, Windoze untrashing. Full service gas station versus minimal service. And problems running applications or opening a particular file are not the kind of problem people take to technicians. Who sends their computer to Best Buy for a problem with an Office document? Nobody I know. The problem isn't the document, but the Office application that needs testing. I know from experience that I can't leave *ANY* problem unfixed. If I don't fix everything and anything, the customer will complain. That includes software and apps. If some game doesn't work, I'll hear about it. I simply don't return machines that have anything wrong. No way to do that without diving deep into the customers files. Somehow, I have the impression that everyone does it like that. Am I wrong, or are there shops that just fix the immediate problem and ignore everything else? Drivel: Both Sony and Dell have done on-site warranty replacements of dead hard disk drives. The "tech" shows up, removes the old drive, installs the new drive, and that's it. Does not install Windoze or use the recovery cd. When asked, they say, "We don't support Windoze". -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
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