While the hand-wringing over the future of journalism, blogging, the nature of conflicts of interest, yada yada, has been
deeply interesting (alongside the
personal attacks - we all like a good public fight don't we?), it's worth recalling that the furore was kicked off by a fairly pertinent point. To whit: Path was uploading user's address books
without their explicit permission. Yes it was a rare omission by Nick Bilton to not call out the
50 or so other apps that often do this by default. But his essential point remains correct, and it's kicked off a wave of excellent reporting into which apps behave like this, and why Apple has
allowed this to go on for so long. But while we continue to point the finger at startups with smartphone apps designed to be social, I'd like to remind Silicon Valley about another business which, despite claims to the contrary, is deeply interested in our private affairs, and is unlikely ever to be as contrite as Dave Morin
was just recently. I speak of the sector known as
Deep Packet Inspection.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/DzLMETvQh2Y/
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