Earlier this summer, Path made two big announcements: The first was its release of Path Talk, a standalone messaging app that combined chat with ambient status updates to let users know what their ...
Now that users better control the data they share online, marketers everywhere have faced one major hurdle: targeting consumers who don't want to sacrifice their privacy and (perhaps more importantly) ...
Journal app Path has confirmed that it uploads entire user address books to its central servers, often without notifying users. The company says it only uses the information to help users connect to ...
Social network Path apologized for uploading its users' address books from their phones without their consent. The issue came to light earlier this week when a developer named Arun Thampi tried to ...
Earlier this year, Path inspired the ire of the Internet when it was revealed the app was uploading users’ entire address books without proper permissions or security measures. Now Path is further ...
Back in early February, Path met with some serious backlash when Arun Thampi revealed that the social app was uploading address book data without explicit permission from its users. Path responded by ...
Is Path up to its controversial and spammy antics again? At the top of Hacker News is a blog post by marketer Stephen Kenwright, calling out Path for recently bombarding its users with a finicky ...
iOS users' address books can easily be copied by apps that call on that data, and companies that make these apps can use them for purposes you might not expect. The recent controversy over the popular ...
At around 1:15 PM EST on Monday, Path announced it had surpassed the 10 million registered user mark. Path CEO Dave Morin revealed the new figure on Path (of course), along with an image of a counter ...