>They do, given that you’d have been informed of that before you provided your consent by opting in to Rally data crowdsourcing.
I haven't tried registering for the study, but I note that an FAQ answer is not enough. Users cannot be expected to search for the FAQ. This needs to be mentioned in the consent form, and not done implicitly 'by opting in' like corporations do.
>Kind of nice that it’d be in the hands of Mozilla, Princeton University, other trusted research partners, and the open web, isn’t it?
The 'open web' is a bit of a nebulous concept, and the CA data was supposedly in the hands of a data scientist at the University of Cambridge.
I haven't tried registering for the study, but I note that an FAQ answer is not enough. Users cannot be expected to search for the FAQ. This needs to be mentioned in the consent form, and not done implicitly 'by opting in' like corporations do.
>Kind of nice that it’d be in the hands of Mozilla, Princeton University, other trusted research partners, and the open web, isn’t it?
The 'open web' is a bit of a nebulous concept, and the CA data was supposedly in the hands of a data scientist at the University of Cambridge.