23 July 21, 07:31
Quote:Continue Reading
ecame the owner of the Audacity repository back in May 2021 and has stumbled from one PR catastrophe to the next since then.
It started with the plan to introduce Telemetry in the open source editor. Audacity is an offline program for various platforms, and Muse Group suggested that Telemtry, which would be opt-in, would help focus development.
The plans to introduce Telemetry were dropped after Muse Group was criticized for the plan. Audacity would still contain an option to provide error reports, but users would be in command of the sending.
A Privacy Notice published in the beginning of July started the next controversy. It listed information that Audacity might collect, e.g. when the built-in automatic updating functionality is used.
Muse Group tried to clarify the newly published privacy policy and admitted back then that some phrases were unclear.
Today, Muse Group published an update to the privacy policy and an apology on the official Audacity GitHub repository. The updated privacy policy of Audacity is available on the official site.
The update addresses the main points of criticism leveled against the previous version of the privacy policy.
In particular, the following points are changed:Closing Words
- The provision that discourages users that are younger than 13 years to use Audacity has been removed.
- The purpose of the error reporting and update checking functionality is explained.
- The full IP address is never stored (either truncated before hashed, or discarded).
- The "collecting personal data for law enforcement" paragraph makes it clear that no additional data is collected.
It remains to be seen if the revised Privacy Policy and apology will result in a calming down of the entire situation. A potential next issue, concerning a Muse Group employee, is currently being discussed on Twitter and elsewhere.
Now You: what is your take on the revised policy and apology?
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