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Zoom's Terms of Service Updates on AI Features Raise Privacy Concerns

SecureWorld News

recently updated its terms of service to permit training AI on user content without an opt-out option. Some legal experts, privacy advocates, and cybersecurity professionals are calling the new terms "excessive" and say it blurs the lines of what should be allowed in terms of consent, data privacy, and personal rights.

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Indusface GDPR Data Processing Addendum – Now Part of Service Terms

Security Boulevard

We are happy to announce that Indusface GDPR is now part of our Service Terms. With this, Indusface customers globally can rely on our terms of the Indusface GDPR DPA. The post Indusface GDPR Data Processing Addendum – Now Part of Service Terms appeared first on Indusface.

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Facebook Won’t Delete WhatsApp Accounts if You Don’t Agree to New Terms of Service

Hot for Security

Facebook announced a few months ago that the upcoming policy changes would require non-European users to accept new terms and conditions or be forced to stop using the service. European regulations would not allow it, so EU citizens didn’t have to agree to new terms.

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Zoom Can Spy on Your Calls and Use the Conversation to Train AI, But Says That It Won’t

Schneier on Security

This is why we need regulation: Zoom updated its Terms of Service in March, spelling out that the company reserves the right to train AI on user data with no mention of a way to opt out. Of course, these are Terms of Service. On Monday, the company said in a blog post that there’s no need to worry about that.

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Google Pushes Privacy to the Limit in Updated Terms of Service

Dark Reading

In the Play Store's ToS, a paragraph says Google may remove "harmful" applications from users' devices. Is that a step too far?

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Microsoft Is Spying on Users of Its AI Tools

Schneier on Security

I’m sure the terms of service—if I bothered to read them—gives them that permission. The only way Microsoft or OpenAI would know this would be to spy on chatbot sessions.

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Class-Action Lawsuit against Google’s Incognito Mode

Schneier on Security

Under the terms of the settlement, Google must further update the Incognito mode “splash page” that appears anytime you open an Incognito mode Chrome window after previously updating it in January. Details about Google’s private-browsing data collection must also appear in the company’s privacy policy.