Your Peloton Is Spying on You, Mozilla Says in New Report

Home fitness equipment got poor marks in the Foundation’s annual Privacy Not Included report

Thomas Smith
OneZero

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Photo by Andrew "Donovan" Valdivia on Unsplash

Your treadmill is likely spying on you. That’s one of the most surprising conclusions of the Mozilla Foundation’s 2021 Privacy Not Included report, which was released this morning. For the report, the Mozilla Foundation’s researchers spent over 950 hours poring over the privacy policies, data gathering procedures, and hardware capabilities of over 150 smart tech products. Many home fitness products — including offerings from Peloton, Nordic Track, and Tonal — got terrible marks in the Foundation’s report.

Many of the smart gadgets in the Mozilla Foundation’s report are obvious privacy offenders. No one should be shocked, for example, that the Portal — an AI-enabled device from Facebook with an always-on microphone and smart camera capable of “tracking your every move” — raises privacy concerns. That your treadmill could be used to gather data about you and target you with ads, though, feels less obvious. That’s part of why Jen Caltrider, Mozilla’s lead researcher on the report, called smart home fitness products “especially problematic.”

In many ways, smart fitness products are likely a victim of their own success. The Peloton Bike and Pelton…

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