109 pointsby donohoe3 hours ago13 comments
  • JumpCrisscrossan hour ago
    > the once-responsive Oura has not yet replied to any of my inquiries, or committed to releasing the numbers

    Illinois has a tight biometric-privacy law [1]. I’d bet Oura isn’t particularly careful about prohibiting e.g. a Texas police department querying the protected information of Illinois residents.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biometric_Information_Privacy_...

  • sz4kerto2 hours ago
    "In my previous blog, I revealed that Oura data is not end-to-end encrypted. That means that an Oura user's health data can be unscrambled at certain points as it travels from a person's ring, through their phone app, over the internet, and as it lands on Oura's servers."

    Very strange -- it seems to be conflating end-to-end encryption with encryption-in-transit.

    • munchleran hour ago
      My understanding is that E2E encryption implies encryption in transit. The message is encrypted at the source and only decrypted at the destination, so it is encrypted everywhere in between.
    • iLoveOncall34 minutes ago
      You are conflating end-to-end encryption with encryption at rest.
    • ggm2 hours ago
      It also doesn't sound like its encrypted at rest. Perhaps each in-transit is held to be a unique e2e IP exchange?
      • juggle-anyhow2 hours ago
        Encrypted at rest means something different. It means if you pull the hard drive out no one can decrypt it. Not that it is encrypted in the database.
  • katoran hour ago
    All this said I'm more concerned about Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) on smartTV you buy in the store and never even realize it's phoning home with everything you watch...
    • JumpCrisscross33 minutes ago
      > I'm more concerned about Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) on smartTV

      You’re more concerned about privacy when it comes to TV viewing than medical data? What a strange hijacking of a serious thread…

      • mcmcmc32 minutes ago
        When you buy a medical data collection device and it collects medical data that’s not exactly a surprise
      • drfloyd5127 minutes ago
        Whataboutism in fancy clothes.
    • guilamu44 minutes ago
      If you're concerned about that do not give internet to your tv and use any kind of tv box instead (shield tv, apple tv, etc).
  • BenFranklin1005 minutes ago
    I considered an Oura but went with an Apple watch instead. I turned on Advanced Data Protection on the paired iPhone for peace of mind. No other large data providers really provide anything equivalent to ADP’s E2EE protection with zero access encryption, especially in the consumer space for activity trackers.
  • focusgroup02 hours ago
    guy who pays $6/month to be monitored by the f3ds
    • MassPikeMikean hour ago
      Judging by ads for cell phone service, most people pay more than that per month to be monitored by the Feds.
      • Cider998640 minutes ago
        Cell phone services don't record your heart rate.
      • mathgeekan hour ago
        Judging by various leaks over the years, you get it for free anyway.
  • shevy-java33 minutes ago
    We can not trust any government here.
  • akerstenan hour ago
    IPOing soon at $11B btw
  • basisword2 hours ago
    This is why although I don't love my Apple Watch, I'm not using anything else. It's very sensitive data and Apple is the only company worth trusting with it. They're not perfect but compared to others there's no competition.
    • GeekyBearan hour ago
      A great example is Apple's new in-house cellular modem design, which gives you the option to stop reporting your exact location to your cellular provider.

      The best way to prevent the Feds from getting access to customer data is to not collect it in the first place.

    • jeroenhd2 hours ago
      Google's Health Connect system doesn't share this data either (without a consent prompt for third party apps, off course). This is to the point where I wish it would just support some kind of sync, because two devices hooked up to the same accounts need a third party app to transfer the health info.

      Apple is subject to the same laws Oura is. The competition is too.

      • jjicean hour ago
        I believe the Apple one is E2E encrypted so they physically can't give useful data. Thats the core issue with Oura here.
    • SoftTalker2 hours ago
      Apple might be pretty good now. There's no assurance they always will be.
    • haritha-jan hour ago
      Yeah there's no one I'd trust with my personal data except Apple. Their track record of refusing to bow down to the feds has been golden. 24 carat infact.
      • echelonan hour ago
        In the US. Apple's policies are flexible when it comes to other nation states.

        All it takes is a political sea change for E2EE to go away.

        Apple already has to hand over a wealth of information when asked by the feds.

        • GeekyBearan hour ago
          Apple literally removed encrypted file storage as a feature in the UK rather than comply with demands for access to encrypted customer data from the UK government.

          Previously, they refused US government demands for a backdoor that would allow them to unlock locked devices.

        • samatman43 minutes ago
          "Things might change in the future" is a perfectly general statement which applies to any state of affairs which is not restricted by natural law.

          That makes it very nearly meaningless.

          • echelon9 minutes ago
            Maybe, weren't it for the fact that we're having age verification and IDV ("protect the kids"), hardware attestation, removal of 3rd party APKs, etc. heaved upon us.

            We've never had so many threats to our privacy and liberties heaved upon us, and the rate is accelerating.

    • mmh0000an hour ago
      You may want to reevaluate.

      Apple has a great PR (propaganda) department that has convinced many people they respect your privacy. In truth, they do not. They're "better" than Google, but only slightly. And only so slightly that realistically it doesn't matter.

      "Apple is taking the unprecedented step of removing its highest level data security tool from customers in the UK, after the government demanded access to user data."

      https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgj54eq4vejo

      It happened in the UK; it will not be long before it happens in the US.

      --

      Also, USA: https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-36084244

      --

      Also, France, Germany, Australia, Brazil, Japan: https://www.apple.com/legal/transparency/pdf/requests-2024-H...

      --

      Also, Russia: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-02-04/apple-fil...

      --

      Also, China: https://www.article19.org/resources/apple-cares-about-digita...

      --

      Also in general: https://proton.me/blog/iphone-privacy

      • add-sub-mul-div37 minutes ago
        It's brilliant how they've laundered their "privacy" reputation through Google etc. and people believe it so fully.
  • throwawa142 minutes ago
    Another reason to add to my list to justify not wearing my Apple watch and moved to a mechanical watch.
  • ck22 hours ago
    Oura doesn't even have GPS does it?

    Government can already get ALL your celltower locations without a warrant

    AND read all your emails and text messages that are over 6 months old, without a warrant

    • arusahnian hour ago
      In a society where women are being prosecuted for medical procedures, menstrual data becomes very risky to have handed over.
      • kevin_thibedeau18 minutes ago
        I sat in a meeting at a data broker in 1998 where one of their product managers was strangely proud about how they could determine menstrual cycles from purchase records. It wasn't just hygiene products either. They already have that data and manipulate women with targeted ads timed for the optimal receptivity.
      • michelban hour ago
        Probably this yeah. Your location data can be obtained from other devices than your own, but this medical data cannot.
    • n8m811 minutes ago
      Great, so they can further extrapolate what exact locations you get nervous / are more relaxed / walk more quickly… the understated problem with PII isn’t about any single data point, it’s about combining data to make probable inferences.
    • speff42 minutes ago
      From what I understand, they can get call records and subscription info w/ administrative subpoenas, but this is the first I've heard of them being able to get location data without a warrant.

      Assuming you meant directly from the telcos and not from the data broker loopholes - in which case pretty much anyone should be able to do that. Emails and texts they still need a warrant for.

  • mystraline2 hours ago
    I was definitely interested in some sort of comprehensive sensor bundle for my healthcare.

    But every one of these devices demands some Android/Apple app, and shipping all my health data to basically non-HIPAA data brokers.

    Id be all over a local-only no-data-exfiltration health tracker. But the companies do NOT want to provide that.

    I, uh, guess, "go surveillance capitalism", for more choices?

    • RunningDroid42 minutes ago
      Many times GadgetBridge* can be used instead of the official app

      *https://codeberg.org/Freeyourgadget/Gadgetbridge

    • duskdozeran hour ago
      If your concern is that the government may access the data, whether it's covered by HIPAA or not is irrelevant, because HIPAA allows government access. Though yes, it would still be better than non-HIPAA in general.
    • permutationsan hour ago
      I will once again proselytize for the new pebble time 2 (I am quite a fan of it). Open source and comes with standard sensors for health monitoring (6 axis imu, heart rate monitor, SpO2). Health data can be kept and analyzed on your phone and there are various apps that can do so. Suffice to say there are “surveillance-free” options out there, and if you’re not satisfied with current app options it is easy to hack your own together
    • SkyPuncheran hour ago
      HIPAA is completely irrelevant to any of this. Ours is technically HIPAA complaint because the data they process is not subject to HIPAA.

      In overly simple terms, if insurance is not involved, then it’s not subject to HIPAA.

    • Aldipower2 hours ago
      I am using Withings in combination Tredict. Both GDPR-compliant.
  • johnnyApplePRNGan hour ago
    OURA is a joke. My GF bought two for us and after a week I made her return them due to non stop dark patterns coming out of that company.

    Everything about that company is disgusting.

    Such a shame, too. I was eager to learn more about my health.

    • Forge3617 minutes ago
      Can you elaborate?
  • amarantan hour ago
    What will the government even do with my heart rate and blood oxygen data?

    "Mr Smith has been running again, we better bring him in for questioning!"

    • jubilanti41 minutes ago
      Target infamously was inferring when teenage girls were pregnant before their parents knew based on reward card data records of single merchant retail purchases.... in 2002.

      Tech companies when they speak to VCs: look at all the creepy things we can infer with ooodles of aggregated data and AI to maximize targeted ad revenue, we're worth 50x what an equivalent non-tech company in our sector is valued, because of all the things we can do with all that data from all those people together

      Tech companies when they speak to their customers: oh you're so silly to even ask about privacy, what possible utility could there be in that single isolated variable?

    • none258537 minutes ago
      Also if you're a woman biological signals can be used to know when you are on your cycle and thus missed it.
    • jonners0023 minutes ago
      No one seems to care anymore, but a big issue that people were concerned about in the 2000s was the switch from 'I know more about me than the blob (corps, gov, etc) does' to, 'I need the blob to remind me where the hell I was that day'. Heart rate and blood oxygen data are hard to exploit data points but not impossible(1), but facing an accusation from someone who knows more about your movements than you do is an uncomfortable scenario. Of course right now, if you're facing an acusation of this type, odds are it's legitimate, or if not, defenseable, but that was the case 15 years ago in Türkiye, but isn't now. Things change.

      (Note 1:"Dr. Bootlicker, the defendant wants the court to believe that she calmly placed herself between the agent and the minor he was trying to apprehend, and asserts that the agent's claim, that the defendant's actions constitute assault, is, in her words, 'ridiculous'. But am I correct in understanding that you view minutes 8 and 9 of the biometric data submitted to the court as characteristic of significant physical exertion that might be similar to that undergone by an assailant while commiting an assault?")

    • jubilanti31 minutes ago
      You're on Hacker News, think like a hacker - in both meanings of the term - for what could possibly go wrong.
      • amarant2 minutes ago
        I did, and came up blank... Any pointers?
    • drfloyd5123 minutes ago
      He was running at the same time our cops were chasing people. Bring him in.
    • AmblingAvocado42 minutes ago
      They used iPhone pick up and orientation data to build a narrative in the trial of Alex Murdaugh, so I imagine something similar.
    • Forge3623 minutes ago
      Location and time
    • an hour ago
      undefined