(no title)
tristanho | 3 years ago
You also omitted the term "non-identifying and aggregate information" in your quote from the policy.
I especially take umbrage to your claim that "you are the product", when again, 100% of our revenue comes from customer subscriptions.
What you're saying is simply not true -- we're a small team of bootstrapped hackers that have worked on improving reading for five years and the lies about us aren't appreciated.
autoexec|3 years ago
Why would you legally need to specify that you might send data to advertisers and publishers? Even the examples you provided like "We may tell an advertiser or publisher that X number of people imported Z annotations from a particular book." suggests that even if you haven't done it already, you anticipate selling data to publishers and advertisers about what people are reading.
That's not a bad thing, in fact it's exactly the sort of thing I'd expect from a service like this (along with making recommendations to users based on their reading history), but it seems weird to dismiss that as something you only put in there for legal CYA reasons.
Please understand the position I'm in. I have no way to know if you've sold data to advertisers and publishers. I can only know what you tell me that you do, or "may" do, in your privacy policy (in context of a privacy policy "may" should be assumed to mean "will").
You may actually be the most privacy respecting SaaS company that has ever existed, who never has and never will make a single dime on anything but subscription fees. I can't know that. I can only go by what your privacy policy says. To me, that policy makes your service look like it will capitalize on the data you collect from your users and that it depends on third parties like amazon, google, facebook, and mixpanel for things that you consider to be essential to your service. Your privacy policy says that you may share anonymized data, yet anonymized data is often trivial to deanonymize, and even aggregated data is not always sufficient to protect people's privacy.
From the information that I have, my assessment is that it's reasonable to expect that in addition to subscription fees my interactions with your service will likely be used to generate profit for you.
If that's wrong today, then I'm happy to have been wrong about that. If you never intend to make a single penny from anything other than subscription fees and you have carefully taken every precaution to the point where you can ensure that user's reading lists and interests couldn't, in any way, be revealed to third parties like Google, Amazon, or Mixpanel then I sincerely apologize for by assumptions, and I'd suggest that you could do a lot more to make that clearer in the information you provide. I'd even open with your intentions to only accept money from subscription fees in your privacy policy.
antiframe|3 years ago
1123581321|3 years ago
Congratulations on the launch; the reader app looks ambitious and I hope you will keep building on it and improving it. Thanks for posting it here.