“You hereby grant (Brilliant) the right to access and use the unused computing power and storage space on your computer/s and/or Internet access or bandwidth for the aggregation of content and use in distributed computing,” the terms of service read. “The user acknowledges and authorizes this use without the right of compensation.” Anybody who declines this provision is not able to install the Kazaa file-swapping software.
This is very bad. If you have Kazaa and have accepted it’s Terms and Conditions you have also given permission for another network to use your computer. Full story was at Wired but I can’t find the archive. It’s not a good thing at all. More here