It is shocking to see a post from Qihoo 360 appear on the official golang blog. This company is notorious for at least the following:<p>* Their flagship products, "360 Security", provides an alternative Windows-update facility; they take use of this to disguise another product of theirs, "360 Browser", as a Windows update: <a href="http://www.ipc.me/360-fa-bu-jia-xi-tong-bu-ding.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.ipc.me/360-fa-bu-jia-xi-tong-bu-ding.html</a> (Chinese source)<p>* "360 Security" and "360 Browser" spies extensively on the user, including uploading "suspicious" files for their "cloud antivirus" service, uploading the browsing history: <a href="http://www.ce.cn/cysc/tech/07hlw/guonei/201302/26/t20130226_21431285.shtml" rel="nofollow">http://www.ce.cn/cysc/tech/07hlw/guonei/201302/26/t20130226_...</a> <a href="http://tech.163.com/10/1231/17/6P8I1JPR000915BF.html" rel="nofollow">http://tech.163.com/10/1231/17/6P8I1JPR000915BF.html</a> (Chinese source)<p>* "360 Security" was caught cheating in AV software tests: <a href="http://www.pcworld.com/article/2919554/tencent-qihoo-antimalware-firms-are-accused-of-cheating-stripped-of-rankings-in-antivirus-tests.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.pcworld.com/article/2919554/tencent-qihoo-antimal...</a>. More interestingly, after the denunciation from the test bodies, Qihoo 360 pretended that it quit the test voluntarily and announced that these tests are no longer suitable for "Internet-era AV software".<p>* They recently announced a "pregnancy mode" in their router product, due to widespread concern about the effect of WiFi signals on the fetus.<p>Their wrongdoings are uncountable.