My old ones broke two days ago and I needed new ones. I chose earbuds from NOTHIHG because according to reviews they are really good for the money. Now, their app is asking me to accept this privacy policy. Maybe this policy is just some general place holder for other products because they sell phones too. And they would have browser history there. Or I could use the earbuds without the app. But the default tuning on them is very bass heavy and I need to change that.

I use DNS resolver on my phone with a lot of filters, so this shit will get blocked. I think I will bite the bullet for now but this is probably the last thing I bought from this company.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    3 hours ago

    An app can be very useful, I use my Bose app to update my headphones’ firmware and to manage a few Bluetooth settings.

    The app itself isn’t the issue, the requested permissions are.

    I am an IT guy and let’s run through the permissions and see what makes sense…

    1. What device are you using? - Fair, this helps Nothing to develop their headphones for the devices that uses them.
    2. Device ID - purely used for marketing, can be skipped.
    3. IP adress - more marketing shit, this can be skipped.
    4. Usage information, product interaction - Fair, this helps Nothing to develop new headphones with feature people actually use.
    5. Performance, diagnostic and crash data - Fair
    6. Browsing history - Nope, the only way this could be fair is if they want data about webbased services you use, but that is not fair to get all your browsing history just to find this.
    7. Location information - What? NO!
    8. Information about interactions with our offerings - Meh, fair, tap an ad and get logged, sure.
    9. Where available, products may use GPS, IP and other tech to determine your aproximate location - What part of “NO!” don’t you understand.
    10. Headphone indicator - yeah, fine.

    What I truly hate about these is that they are basically an all/nothing deal, you have to press the button or mark the checkbox to set $EULA_AGREE = $true for the app to work, you can’t just agree to parts of the EULA, you have to give them everything they ask for, preferably while looking lovingly into the camera of the phone so they can send the photo to their CEO.

    The last part was obviously hyperbol, but that is how it feels from time to time…

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        4 hours ago

        Getting rid of bugs?

        I have noticed that from time to time, my Bose QC35 II may suddenly loose the clarity of the sound, a restart solves it but It is annoying, this could probably be a thing to be patched in a new firmware release.

    • Rikj000@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago

      Bose headphone owner + IT guy here,
      their app is filled to the brim with spyware last time I checked!

      Uninstalled it immediately after de-compiling and scanning for known trackers with ClassyShark3xodus.

      No regrets, the headphones work perfectly well without that stupid app!

      • Miles O'Brien@startrek.website
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        21 hours ago

        “tech enthusiast” vs “IT guy” in a nutshell.

        Tech enthusiast: a little privacy breach is okay, as a treat for the headphones I already paid them money for. It’s not their fault their app wants to know these things. It’s mostly all good.

        IT guy: shoot it 417 times after you uninstall it to make sure it’s truly no longer on your phone.

        Side story: I forgot my good earbuds at home one day and decided I didn’t want to hear tools all day, so I bought a new pair at the store I was working at that day. 2 minutes later I’m at the counter again to return them because they wanted me to download an app and wouldn’t pair without it. Bought a $1 pack of earplugs instead.

      • devfuuu@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        All the big apps are the same shit. The Sony app for wf and wh 1000xm3 have the same distopia conditions on the terms.

        • Rikj000@discuss.tchncs.de
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          22 hours ago

          Oh yeah I know!

          Lately I aim to only install FOSS apps from F-Droid for that reason.

          If no F-Droid app available / only Play Store, then I always scan them with ClassyShark3xodus against trackers.

          If they’re filled with trackers (very likely) and not absolutely nessecary for my daily workflow, I uninstall them immediately.

          Currently about 75% of my apps come from F-Droid, and hope to only increase that percentage! :)