Privacy concerns about some products? Mozilla’s buyers guide is always at help / Digital Information World

If you’re concerned about your privacy, you should check out Mozilla’s buyer’s guide, which evaluates different products based on their ability to preserve consumer privacy. From recommending products as privacy preservers to spreading awareness to customers about products that are highly regarded but do not maintain user privacy, Mozilla’s Buyer’s Guide is a trusted source to check before buying any gadget.
The Mozilla Foundation has released this year’s list of products that should not be gifted on upcoming holidays, in light of the serious potential data breach issues within these products.
The list was compiled by the Firefox browser in 2017 and has about 90 devices that are otherwise full of high ratings and benefits according to various articles, but the privacy concerns are only discussed by the Mozilla Buyer’s Guide. What consumers fear and worry about the most is what those products are, how the data is collected from them, how it is used and whether it will affect their privacy or their loved ones. To address your concerns, Mozilla makes sure that different products pass Mozilla’s minimum security standard before they are marked as privacy assured products.
Those products that do not meet Mozilla’s minimum security standards are marked with a warning stating that privacy is not included with this device/device/product. Additionally, there is an option for users to mark products as not creepy or super creepy, this counts as votes and provides an at-a-glance understanding of a product’s reliability.
For example, the Meta Quest Pro AR (augmented-reality) and VR (virtual reality) headsets manufactured by Meta, which is Facebook’s parent company, are labeled with a warning explaining how different cameras are implanted inside and outside the headset that cost $1.5K food . Cameras help to enhance user experience, but they are also used to design your facial features that other players in the Metaverse can see.
The research by the Mozilla product review team also uncovered Meta’s irony about user agreement documentation, which is a mega-document divided into 14 sub-documents and, as estimated by Mozilla, contains about 37,700 words. This word length is 6,747 words longer than A Christmas Carol and will take a massive four hours and fifty minutes of training.
Moving to the part of the report where the Amazon Echo point is discussed, it gets the same warning as Meta Quest Pro. Amazon’s Alexa-powered Echo Dot is in business, at homes, stores, workplaces, and wherever you name it, it’s the most dominant bot in use in today’s world. And why not? It plays music, turns on the lights, remembers different tasks and also tells jokes. Amazon proudly claims that it has not yet sold its data to any third party, considering the fact that the data obtained by Alexa-powered Echo Dot can be used by Amazon to offer more products to us. to sell which then meets our needs. this claim does not appear to fully comply with consumer privacy. After all, someone listens to things and uses that information to benefit themselves.
Amazon does not sell our information to any other source, but it provides access to its users who are retailers on Amazon web stores to target the audience based on the information they get from Amazon Insights. This is achieved through massive data collection by Amazon, from its products such as Alexa Searches, your Amazon Prime viewing history, when you watch shows and what types of shows you watch, and how much time you spend on these shows. In addition to the permissions, Alexa requests during installation range from accessing saved contacts to photos and videos in the gallery as well.
But not all products have the preservation of consumer privacy as their top priority, and Mozilla also mentioned the items that passed their minimum security standards. Sonos’ smart speakers now come with their own privacy-friendly Sonos voice control that doesn’t send or store your data. So, for example, if you asked the device to play a song, only you would be listening to it and not anyone else. This privacy assurance feature is not available in Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant.
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