It seems that in the wild world of privacy—or lack thereof—in US tech, where you come to rival behavior that would cause sanctions if carried out by countries like China, Telly stands as a new contender for a service that aims to obtain our personal data in any way and at any price.
In this case, as we read in TechCrunch, the price that is put on our data and our privacy at home is that of a Smart TVwhich the company would provide for free to users who sign up for the service in exchange for having a secondary screen that permanently displays ads, in addition to using all TV usage data commercially.
Also, the television has cameras and microphones for uses that are not entirely clear, but worst of all is that the annotations that were left by mistake in the privacy terms of the service, which we can see on these lines, raise even more doubts.
Telly explains that this clarification on the elimination of personal data of minors it had to do with a question to the developersbut it is also stated that the company collects social and cultural identifiers, as well as specific details such as whether we are environmental activists. Some users speculate that this service is only available in the United States because other countries would not allow something like this, although nothing is officially known.
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Jordi Bercial
Avid technology and electronics enthusiast. I tinkered with computer components almost since I could walk. I started working at Geeknetic after winning a contest on their forum for writing hardware articles. Drift, mechanics and photography lover. Do not hesitate and leave a comment on my articles if you have any questions.