In September, the Neon app briefly became a sensation on app download charts by promising to pay users for recording and sharing their phone calls. Then it abruptly went offline amid controversy over ...
A controversial app that claims to pay people for recordings of their phone calls, which are then used to train AI models, could soon return after being disabled due to a significant security flaw.
As a journalist, I live and die by my interviews. And for years, recording phone calls has been the most annoying part of my workflow. So when Apple announced a native call-recording and transcription ...
Neon is an call-recording app that pays users for access to the audio, which the app in turn sells to AI companies for training their models. Since its launch last week, it quickly rose in popularity, ...
A popular iPhone call recording app called Neon was taken offline after a critical security flaw was discovered. The vulnerability exposed sensitive user data, including phone numbers, call recordings ...
In the age of AI, privacy experts are raising alarms about the huge appetite for user data to feed it as training material. AI companies are paying billions in lawsuits for illicitly using books and ...