With
Carrier IQ and
O2's most recent data-snooping, people's vigilance about what information cellphones transmit is increasing. Using a
Galaxy Note,
AndroidPit found that every four minutes,
Vlingo's voice-recognition app was sending a packet of data to an unencrypted server. The packet contained your GPS co-ordinates, IMEI (unique device identifier), contact list and the title of every song stored on your device -- without proper warning in the privacy policy you agree to when starting up the app. We spoke with co-founder John Wynn, product marketing head TJ Leonard and communications manager Erin Keleher, who gave us a full and frank discussion about what's going on and the steps it's taking to remedy the situation, which we've got for you after the break.
Continue reading Vlingo co-founder explains data-collection issues
Vlingo co-founder explains data-collection issues originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Jan 2012 19:14:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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