▲ | thisisit 2 days ago | |||||||||||||
5 years ago I was researching the iOS app ecosystem. As part of that exercise I was looking at the potential revenue figures for some free apps. One developer had a free app to track some child health data. It was long time ago so I don't remember the exact data being collected. But when asked about the economics of his free app, the developer felt confident about a big pay day. As per him the app's worth was in the data being collected. I don't know what happened to the app but it seemed that app developers know what they are doing when they invade privacy of their users - under the guise of "free" app. After that I became very conscious about disabling as many permissions as possible and especially not using apps to store any personal data, especially health data. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | SoftTalker 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
I don't understand why anyone would let these psychopathic corporations have any of their personal or health data. Why would you use an app that tracked health data, or use a wearable device from any of these companies that did that. You have to assume, based on their past behavior, that they are logging every detail and it's going to be sold and saved in perpetuity. | ||||||||||||||
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