That was a pre-announcement, which they withdrew.

--dave

On 2021-07-05 10:10 p.m., Howard Gibson via talk wrote:
Karen,

     Well damn.

     I am using Audacity to record my vinyl LPs into MP3 files to play in my 
car.  Can they detect that?

On Mon, 5 Jul 2021 21:54:04 -0400 (EDT)
Karen Lewellen via talk <talk@gtalug.org> wrote:

Speaking personally as someone who  has used the program for field
production,  I am rather disappointed.




Audacity open source audio editor has become spyware


https://www.slashgear.com/audacity-open-source-audio-editor-has-become-spyware-05681012/


Ewdison Then
    - Jul 5, 2021, 12:47am CDT

One of open source software’s biggest strengths is, naturally, its openness,
which brings other benefits like freedom of use, security through scrutiny,
flexibility, and more. That is mostly thanks to the open source-friendly
licenses these programs use, but, from time to time, someone comes along and
tries to make changes that infuriate the community of users and developers.
Sometimes, those changes can even be illegal. Such seems to be the fate that
has befallen Audacity, one of the open source world’s most popular pieces of
software that now comes under a very invasive privacy policy.

The brouhaha started just a few months ago when Audacity was bought by the Muse
Group, the company behind equally popular music software like MuseScore, which
is also open source, and Ultimate Guitar. So far, Audacity remains open source
(and can’t really be changed into proprietary software in its current form),
but that doesn’t mean that Muse Group can’t do some pretty damaging
changes. Those changes come in the form of the new privacy policy that was just
updated a few days ago, a policy that now allows it to collect user data.

As a desktop application with no core online functionality, Audacity never had
any need to “phone home” in the first place. Now the privacy policy says
that the new company does collect data and does so in a way that’s both
over-arching and vague, most likely by design. For example, it says that it
collects data necessary for law enforcement but doesn’t specify what kind of
data is collected.

There are also questions regarding the storage of data, which is located in
servers in the USA, Russia, and the European Economic Area. IP addresses, for
example, are stored in an identifiable way for a day before being hashed and
then stored in servers for a year. The new policy also disallows people under
the age of 13 from using the software, which,  as FOSS Post points out, is a
violation of the GPL license that Audacity uses.

The open source community was understandably irked by these changes.
Fortunately, Audacity is open source software, and it will most likely be taken
by the community and forked in a different direction, perhaps with a different
name. That will leave Muse Group to develop Audacity on its own instead of
being able to leverage (and exploit) the open source community’s hard work.


--
David Collier-Brown,         | Always do right. This will gratify
System Programmer and Author | some people and astonish the rest
dav...@spamcop.net           |                      -- Mark Twain

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