Wi-Fi sensibility: Not really risky, but not really needed<article>
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Windows 10—bear with me—has shipped, but this column isn’t about the new operating system, which has received generally positive reviews from our friends at
PCWorld and elsewhere. Rather, it’s about a feature that started receiving attention a few weeks before release and more on the ship date: Wi-Fi Sense.</p><p>
Wi-Fi Sense allows Windows 10 users to connect automatically to open Wi-Fi networks, as well as to share access to Wi-Fi networks for which they have passwords. The former isn’t controversial at all: iOS allows carriers to set up automatic connections to networks they run or partner with as of several releases ago. Many apps for mobile devices and computers also allow this.</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/2954731/privacy/wi-fi-sensibility-not-really-risky-but-not-really-needed.html#jump">To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here[/url]</p></section></article>
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Wi-Fi sensibility: Not really risky, but not really needed