Monday, March 8, 2021

Privacy and the Clubhouse App

Clubhouse might be the hottest app that's not even publicly available yet, but privacy issues are already being discussed online. Some of the people who are particularly upset? Those who say they have profiles without even having used the app before...

Clubhouse reportedly requests access to your phone's contacts, under the pretense that you can connect with other users of the social network. But people are claiming that Clubhouse takes information from your contact list and builds "shadow profiles" of people who have never signed up...

If you allow Clubhouse to use your contact list, the app then reportedly has access to your contacts' names, phone numbers and how many friends they have on Clubhouse. But that's not all. Privacy advocates note Clubhouse records voice chats of the virtual rooms, which also doesn't sit well with some current users of the app.

Clubhouse's Community Guidelines states: "Solely for the purpose of supporting incident investigations, we temporarily record the audio in a room while the room is live." more

More privacy considerations...
Clubhouse app technology runs on the platform of Agora.io, an audio tech startup in Shanghai, China.

• Voice recordings may be paired with personal account details, and transferred into a government dossier for future voice identification surveillance purposes.
• What is said using the app may not be very private given hackers, lurkers and government interests. Not a good way to communicate confidentially.

“I refuse to join any club that would have me as a member” Groucho Marx