Got Bose? They’re Spying On You & Selling Your Private Data

Fact checked
Bose is facing a new lawsuit for violating customers' privacy rights by spying on them & selling their private info without permission.

Not only has Bose been scamming its clientele for decades with false advertising and overpriced audio equipment made out of cheap cardboard internal components, Bose Corp is currently facing a new lawsuit for spying on its wireless headphone and speaker customers.

Bose uses an app that records the music, podcasts, erotic content, and other audio they listen to.

They further violate consumers’ privacy rights by profiting on the selling of their private information without permission.

Bose has previously sued Consumer Reports for exposing their products’ poor quality, below average performance, and skepticism of Bose’s marketing.

Reuters reports:

The complaint filed on Tuesday by Kyle Zak in federal court in Chicago seeks an injunction to stop Bose’s “wholesale disregard” for the privacy of customers who download its free Bose Connect app from Apple Inc or Google Play stores to their smartphones.

“People should be uncomfortable with it,” Christopher Dore, a lawyer representing Zak, said in an interview. “People put headphones on their head because they think it’s private, but they can be giving out information they don’t want to share.”

Bose did not respond on Wednesday to requests for comment on the proposed class action case. The Framingham, Massachusetts-based company has said annual sales top $3.5 billion.

Zak’s lawsuit was the latest to accuse companies of trying to boost profit by quietly amassing customer information, and then selling it or using it to solicit more business.

After paying $350 for his QuietComfort 35 headphones, Zak said he took Bose’s suggestion to “get the most out of your headphones” by downloading its app, and providing his name, email address and headphone serial number in the process.

But the Illinois resident said he was surprised to learn that Bose sent “all available media information” from his smartphone to third parties such as Segment.io, whose website promises to collect customer data and “send it anywhere.”

Audio choices offer “an incredible amount of insight” into customers’ personalities, behavior, politics and religious views, citing as an example that a person who listens to Muslim prayers might “very likely” be a Muslim, the complaint said.

“Defendants’ conduct demonstrates a wholesale disregard for consumer privacy rights,” the complaint said.

Zak is seeking millions of dollars of damages for buyers of headphones and speakers, including QuietComfort 35, QuietControl 30, SoundLink Around-Ear Wireless Headphones II, SoundLink Color II, SoundSport Wireless and SoundSport Pulse Wireless.

He also wants a halt to the data collection, which he said violates the federal Wiretap Act and Illinois laws against eavesdropping and consumer fraud.

Dore, a partner at Edelson PC, said customers do not see the Bose app’s user service and privacy agreements when signing up, and the privacy agreement says nothing about data collection.

Edelson specializes in suing technology companies over alleged privacy violations.

1 Comment

  1. Bose isn’t for everyone, but they do make quality hardware and have excellent Customer Support and Service. You get what you pay for. I’ve got an Am3 speaker system from 1985 that still performs well. That’s because the speakers were made with closed-cell foam surrounds (during the oil crises days no less!). Of course the spying thing isn’t good if true!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.