If you review/recommend apps without considering their privacy implications, you're complicit in the culture of corporate surveillance.
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@aral I’m not saying reviewers should never be mindful of privacy, but to knock anyone who doesn’t mention it in every review seems harsh. -
@matthewbbolton (Reading through that@TheNextWeb list, there are a number of highly questionable apps being advocated.)#privacy
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@aral B) If you’re wrong, you’ve wandered into libel territory. -
@matthewbbolton Either a company has a publicly-declared business model or you can warn people that they do not. No libel here. -
@aral Not in that example, but there could be in the other one that I responded to if you were wrong.
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@aral Only if you _know_ that to be the case. A) Indulging in speculation in reviews is bad practice …Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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