: Ovulation tracker app Premom charged with sharing users’ personal information

U.S. regulators said late Tuesday that Easy Healthcare Corp.’s ovulation tracker app Premom shared users “sensitive” personal information with third parties, and users’ health data with Google and a mobile marketing-analytics company.

Previous post Project Syndicate: The Fed and other central banks face a reckoning for the damage they’ve caused
Next post : ‘That voice was not mine’: Listen to a U.S. senator’s AI deep fake at a Capitol Hill hearing