Home » Technology » Title: Neon App: Paid for Calls, Recordings Sold for AI Training

Title: Neon App: Paid for Calls, Recordings Sold for AI Training

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

A new app, NEON, is ​paying users‍ 15 cents per minute to record ‍their phone calls ⁤for artificial intelligence (AI) training purposes, raising privacy and legal concerns. The company collects the audio data to ⁤improve ⁤its speech⁤ recognition‌ and language models, but the terms of service place ​significant liability on participants.

NEON’s terms explicitly ​prohibit users from selling or licensing ⁢recordings‍ of their own calls to third parties, making them liable to NEON ⁢should they do so. Participants also waive any claims regarding how NEON or its customers utilize⁢ the recordings. Furthermore, ‍users assume responsibility for any infringement of third-party ⁤rights occurring during the calls – such as reciting copyrighted material or humming a protected⁣ melody – which could lead to costly legal issues if incorporated into large language models.Users are also liable if they use ⁤the app in locations where it is prohibited. Conversely, NEON is barred from fraudulent​ practices, including manipulating ⁣recordings or engaging in one-sided conversations to generate data.

The app’s terms, as reported by Heise‍ Online, ⁤highlight the complex legal landscape surrounding AI data collection and the ‌potential ⁤risks for individuals contributing to these ⁤datasets. ‍While offering ‌a small financial incentive,the ⁣agreement shifts considerable legal responsibility ‍onto the user,possibly exposing them to unforeseen liabilities.

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