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Many fitness trackers leak personal data: study
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) July 18, 2016


Cooler growth hits Netflix in second quarter
San Francisco (AFP) July 18, 2016 - Netflix shares plunged Monday after its latest quarterly update showed subscriber growth below expectations for the streaming television giant.

Netflix shares tumbled 15 percent in after-hours trade after the quarterly report.

The company said it ended the second quarter with 83 million subscribers, adding 1.7 million. That was well below Netflix's own forecast of 2.5 million additions and lower than many analyst forecasts.

Netflix said growth was hurt, especially in the United States, when it raised rates on many long-time subscribers who had been "grandfathered" when it hiked most prices.

"We think some members perceived the news as an impending new price increase rather than the completion of two years of grandfathering," the company said in a statement.

"Churn of members who were actually ungrandfathered is modest and conforms to our expectations."

Net profit for the quarter was $41 million, up from $26 million a year earlier. Revenue rose to $2.1 billion from $1.6 billion.

Netflix said its march to becoming a global television provider was making progress, projecting gains of some two million subscribers outside the US in the third quarter.

"Our approach in expanding our global footprint in January was to launch a service targeting early adopters and then to listen, learn and iterate quickly," it said.

"Now that we are six months in, we will localize Netflix in Poland and Turkey with the addition of local language in the user interface, subtitles and dubbing. Localization in other markets will take place over time as economically prudent."

The streaming television pioneer in January significantly expanded its global footprint to 190 countries, making its Internet TV service available in 130 new markets, including India -- but not China.

Security weaknesses on many popular fitness trackers may allow hackers to access or potentially manipulate user data, a study showed Monday.

The study of seven Android-powered trackers by the security firm AV-Test showed vulnerabilities similar to that found in its research from a year earlier -- with many devices lacking secure connections or tamper protection.

The researchers said the Apple Watch, which was evaluated using different criteria because of its operating system, had a "high security rating" despite some "theoretical vulnerabilities."

The seven Android devices showed varying levels of security, with some allowing hackers the ability to access or tamper with user data.

"As already witnessed in the initial test of fitness wristbands last year, many manufacturers are also committing similar errors in the current test," the report said. "They often don't pay sufficient attention to the aspect of security."

The highest risk came from devices made by Runtastic, Striiv and Xiaomi, with seven to eight potential vulnerabilities out of 10.

"These products can be tracked rather easily, use inconsistent or no authentication or tamper protection, the code of the apps is not sufficiently obfuscated (to secure data), and data traffic can be manipulated and monitored with root certificates," the report said.

"Worst of all, Xiaomi even stores its entire data unencrypted on the smartphone."

The researchers noted that security should be taken more seriously as fitness trackers move beyond the casual athlete, and health insurers use such devices to set rates or offer discounts.

According to research firm IDC, the number of fitness trackers sold worldwide topped 75 million in 2015 and in 2016 the number is expected to exceed 100 million.

The most secure devices in the test, with two to three potential security risks, were the Pebble Time, Microsoft Band 2 and Basis Peak.

The Apple Watch, the report said, is "almost impossible to track," but in airplane mode it reveals certain identifying characteristics which "should actually not be the case."

The Apple device "mostly uses encrypted connections that are additionally secured," but its updates are made through an unencrypted connection, the researchers said.


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