Kerbal Space program is a spyware program that mines large amounts of personal information of its users<sup><ahref="#1">[1]</a></sup><sup><ahref="#2">[2]</a></sup>,
to use for its own advertising, and to sell to other advertisers. On its face, it is a video game, but it is loaded with a huge amount of spyware that makes it completely unusable from a privacy standpoint.
If you MUST use this program, run it in a VM with no internet connection. KSP collects so much information, that it has managed to catapult itself into the highest ranks of
this website and can only be described as a uniquely malicious datamining platform. KSP at one point was integrated with the <ahref="../articles/redshell.html">Redshell</a> spyware platform.<sup><ahref="#1">[3]</a></sup><sup>
Anyone who is familiar with privacy violating software can notice that compared to most spyware out there, this is a MASSIVE amount of personal information that is being collected.
It's further clarified that not only does this program collect all of your information, but it uses this information to build a unique profile of you by correlating that information
KSP is integrated with social networking websites such as Facebook<sup><ahref="#1">[1]</a></sup>, which allows it to collect a lot of personal information about you from any sort of social media profile that you
have on that website. If you're wondering how it could collect your date of birth, gender and photo if the program doesn't explicitly ask you, this is probably how it does it.
When you give KSP access to your Facebook account by logging in through spyware platforms such as Facebook, it collects as much information from your profile as it possibly can. This includes:
As well as all other information that KSP claims it collects in the previous section. As you can see, this feature is a way for KSP to collect huge amounts of your personal information,
which it does not show and restraint in collecting.
"When you use a third-party authentication service or link your Company account with a third-party account, you will be asked to provide account information associated with that third-party account. Certain membership information may be transferred automatically to the Company when you register to join an Online Service from a third-party gaming network system or link your Online Service membership with a third-party service, such as your friends list on that gaming network or social network service."
</i><sup><ahref="#1">[1]</a></sup></p>
<p><i>
"When you use Facebook Connect, OpenID or another multisite ID to log in to an Online Service, those ID services will authenticate your identity and provide you the option to share certain personal information with us to pre-populate our sign up form. Depending on your account settings, multisite IDs may also provide other information to us. Please check the terms of those services before using them to log into an Online Service."
</i><sup><ahref="#1">[1]</a></sup></p>
<p><i>
"If you use, purchase, or register for an Online Service through a third-party service such as a gaming console's network service, an internet based gaming service, or a social network website, or request that we associate a Company account with a third-party service account, then limited user account personal information may be transferred to the Company as part of the registration process and we may be able to collect information about your use of the Online Services."
Which of course, all have their own separate privacy policies about how they handle your information. So, not only is KSP tracking you, but a huge amount of advertisers are
"In the event we offer services or promotions where your personal information is separately collected and used according to the privacy policy of a third party, we will inform you of that at the time of collection and you may elect not to participate in the service or promotion."
Is "other information" personal information? There isn't any transparency here, so we cant know, but its clear that KSP uses its massive datamining platform to collaborate with other datamining platforms.
It's clearly stated in the privacy policy<sup><ahref="#1">[1]</a></sup> that this information is used to target users for promotions, and to analyse for marketing purposes:
"The Company uses this information to send you promotional materials. [...] We also use your personal and other information for our internal marketing and demographic studies, so we can constantly improve the products and services we provide you and to better meet your needs."
Its impossible to discern the level and scope of privacy violations done by this software beyond what they tell us in the privacy policy. The source code could potentially be hiding
more spyware, but nobody can audit it, and nobody can go into the source code and disable all of the spyware. If KSP had nothing to hide, you would be able to build the game from its
<ahref="https://forum.kerbalspaceprogram.com/index.php?/topic/171850-does-ksp-v14-really-have-spyware-in-it/&page=12&tab=comments#comment-3314988">Does KSP v1.4 really have spyware in it?</a>
<ahref="https://old.reddit.com/r/Steam/comments/8pud8b/psa_red_shell_spyware_holy_potatoes_were_in_space/">[PSA] RED SHELL Spyware — "Holy Potatoes! We’re in Space?!" integrated and removed it after complaints</a>
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