A new application offer to record your phone calls and will pay you for the sound so that it can sell the data to AI companies is, incredibly, the No. 2 In Apple Apple’s Apple Apple Social Network section.
The application, Neon mobilehimself as a money production tool that offers “hundreds or even thousands of dollars a year” to access your audio conversations.
The Neon website says the company pays 30 ¢ per minute when you call other new users and up to $ 30 per day to make calls to anyone else. The app also pays for references. The app first ranked No. 476 in the US App Store social networking category on September 18, but jumped to No. 10 at the end of yesterday Competence.
On Wednesday, Neon was found in position no. 2 in the top free iPhone charts for social applications.
NEON also became the first total application or the game of No. 7 earlier on Wednesday morning and the No. 6.
According to NEON’s terms of service, the company’s mobile application can record the incoming and outbound phone calls of users. However, neon marketing He claims to only record the side of the call unless with another Neon user.
These data are sold to “AI companies”, the state of NEON’s service terms, “for the development, training, testing and improving mechanical learning models, tools and artificial intelligence systems and related technologies”.
The fact that there is such an application and is allowed in applications is an indication of how far away it has been violated in users’ lives and in areas that are once considered private. His high ranking in the Apple App Store, meanwhile, is proof that there is now a market for the market seemingly willing to exchange their privacy for pens, regardless of the highest cost for themselves or society.
Despite Neon’s Privacy Policy, its terms include a very wide license for its users’ data, where Neon Grans Ally A:
… Worldwide, Exclusive, Irrevocable, Transferable, Royalty-Free, Fully Paid Right and License (with the Right to SUBLICENSE THROUGH MULTIPLE TIERs) Perform (Including by Means of a Digital Audio Transmission), Communicate to The Public, Reproduce, Modify for the Purpose of Formatting for Display, Create Derivative Works as Authorized In These Terms, and Distribute Your Recordings, in whole or in part, in any forms of media and through any media channels, in any case either now known or then developed.
This leaves plenty of space for Neon to do more with users’ data than it claims.
The terms also include an extensive part of Beta features, which have no guarantee and can have all kinds of issues and errors.


Although the application of Neon creates many red flags, it can be technically legal.
“Recording only on one side of the telephone call is aimed at avoiding phone laws”, Jennifer Daniels, a partner of the law firm RomeThe privacy, safety and data protection team tells TechCrunch.
“Sub [the] Laws of many states, you must have consent to both parties in a conversation to record it … It’s an interesting approach, “Daniels says.
Peter Jackson, the power of cyber and privacy Greenberg Glusker, Agreed-and tells TechCrunch that the language around “one-sided transcripts” sounds as if it can be a way to say that NEON records users’ calls as a whole, but it can simply remove what the other party said from the final copy.
In addition, legal experts pointed out concerns about how anonymous the data can be.
New allegations Removes the names, e -mails and phone numbers of users before selling data to AI companies. But the company does not say how AI partners or others who sell could use this data. Voice data could be used to make fake calls that sound like you come from you, or AI companies could use your voice to make their own AI voices.
“Once your voice is there, it can be used for fraud,” says Jackson. “Now this company has your phone number and virtually plenty of information – they have your voice recordings that could be used to create a fake for you and make all sorts of fraud.”
Even if the company itself is reliable, Neon does not reveal what its reliable partners are or what the entities are allowed to do with users’ data further below the road. NEON is also subject to possible data violations, as it may be any company with valuable data.


In a brief test by TechCrunch, Neon did not offer any indication that he records the user’s call, nor warned the recipient of the call. The application worked like any other voice-over -ip application and the caller identified the incoming phone number, as usual. (We will let it to security researchers try to verify other claims of the application.)
New founder Alex Kiam Did not return a request for comments.
Kiam, who is only recognized as “Alex” on the company’s website, takes advantage of Neon by a New York apartment, shows a business deposit.
A linkedIn position It indicates that Kiam raised money from Apfront Ventures a few months ago to start, but the investor did not respond to a TechCrunch survey since writing.
Do AI desensitized users in concerns about privacy?
There was a time when companies that wanted to benefit from collecting data through mobile applications handled this kind of thing in the wicked.
When it was revealed in 2019 that Facebook pays adolescents to install an application that is spying on them, it was a scandal. The following year, the Buzzed titles were again discovered that App Store providers were operating dozens of seemingly harmful applications to collect use data on mobile applications. There are regular warnings to be careful for VPN applications that are often not as private as they claim. There are even government reports that describe in detail how organizations buy regular personal data that is “commercially available” on the market.
Now AI agents are regular meetings to make notes and AI devices are on the market. But at least in these cases, everyone consents to a recording, Daniels tells TechCrunch.
In the light of this widespread use and sale of personal data, they are now likely to believe that if their data is sold anyway, they may also benefit from it.
Unfortunately, they may share more information than they realize and endanger the privacy of others when they do.
“There is a huge desire on behalf, for sure, knowledge workers – and honestly, all – to make it as easy as possible to do your job,” says Jackson. “And some of these productivity tools do so at the expense of your privacy, but more and more, the privacy of those with whom you interact daily.”
