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GregoryAdams
GregoryAdams
September 24, 2025

Neon Mobile app, ranking No. 2 in Apple’s US App Store, pays users for recorded phone calls—up to 30¢ per minute—selling data to AI firms for training models. Its terms grant broad rights over user recordings, raising privacy and fraud risks amid legal gray areas. Experts warn voice data could enable impersonation or leaks. Founder Alex Kiam remains unresponsive amid scrutiny. AI’s normalization heightens concerns over desensitization to privacy erosion.

Neon Mobile app, ranking No. 2 in Apple’s US App Store, pays users for recorded phone calls—up to 30¢ per minute—selling data to AI firms for training models. Its terms grant broad rights over user recordings, raising privacy and fraud risks amid legal gray areas. Experts warn voice data could enable impersonation or leaks. Founder Alex Kiam remains unresponsive amid scrutiny. AI’s normalization heightens concerns over desensitization to privacy erosion. Neon Mobile app, ranking No. 2 in Apple’s US App Store, pays users for recorded phone calls—up to 30¢ per minute—selling data to AI firms for training models. Its terms grant broad rights over user recordings, raising privacy and fraud risks amid legal gray areas. Experts warn voice data could enable impersonation or leaks. Founder Alex Kiam remains unresponsive amid scrutiny. AI’s normalization heightens concerns over desensitization to privacy erosion. Neon Mobile app, ranking No. 2 in Apple’s US App Store, pays users for recorded phone calls—up to 30¢ per minute—selling data to AI firms for training models. Its terms grant broad rights over user recordings, raising privacy and fraud risks amid legal gray areas. Experts warn voice data could enable impersonation or leaks. Founder Alex Kiam remains unresponsive amid scrutiny. AI’s normalization heightens concerns over desensitization to privacy erosion.
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