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Tuesday, December 21, 2010
You Stream Music, Pandora Streams Your Info to Advertisers:
Online radio network Pandora provides users with highly curated playlists based on the Music Genome Project, an analysis of more than 400 attributes of a song that make it appealing to your specific ear taste buds. The cost of this pretty incredible service for most folks: nothing at all. Well, nothing at all if you don't consider quietly sharing some of your web habits with advertisers a "cost."
According to the WSJ's data, Pandora shares age, gender, location, and phone ID information with marketing firms on both its iPhone and Android mobile versions. So while advertsiers won't have your name and email address, they'll get their hands on a lot of info about your mobile phone behavior.
Is that a fair exchange for hours of free music? Only users who stream more than 40 hours of music a month are billed 99 cents, and Pandora offers a premium paid version for $36 a year that comes with a few perks, like unlimited listening, no ads, and the ability to skip however many songs you want. Pandora does have a Privacy Policy posted on its website, which reveals the service employs cookies to "collect non-personally identifiable information" for tracking and advertising purposes. It doesn't expressly say Pandora will share your phone's unique ID number with advertisers, but it gives you a hint that that music you're enjoying for free does indeed have a cost -- whether or not you're (somewhat) unwittingly becoming an advertising drone is up to you. Wallstreet Journal
Labels:
Android,
Cell phones,
Internet,
Iphone,
Retail,
Technology
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