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Monday, March 11, 2013

Amiigo: The exercise tracker that identifies exercises

Amiigo: The exercise tracker that identifies exercises

Mar 11, 2013 05:23 am

Amiigo

Self-tracking devices are all the rage these days. I went to the Apple store, and there was practically a whole wall of them. They were all uni-taskers though. There was one for cycling, another for running, and one for golfing. Amiigo, an Indiegogo campaign with four days left to contribute (but funded to completion five times over as of this writing), aims to track multiple exercises and figure out what you're exercise you're doing automatically.

There's a bracelet and a clip for your shoe, and Amiigo does the rest. There will be hundreds of exercises baked in, but you will also be able to create your own exercises, and Amiigo will theoretically figure out on its own that you're doing it again. Progress is viewable via your smartphone.

Here's the pitch:

Sounds pretty awesome if it works as advertised. A $99 contribution will get you one by June.

What data brokers know about you

Mar 11, 2013 04:46 am

Lois Beckett for ProPublica has a thorough piece on data brokers — companies that collect and sell information about you — and what they know and where they get the data from.

They start with the basics, like names, addresses and contact information, and add on demographics, like age, race, occupation and "education level," according to consumer data firm Acxiom's overview of its various categories.

But that's just the beginning: The companies collect lists of people experiencing "life-event triggers" like getting married, buying a home, sending a kid to college — or even getting divorced.

Credit reporting giant Experian has a separate marketing services division, which sells lists of "names of expectant parents and families with newborns" that are "updated weekly."

The companies also collect data about your hobbies and many of the purchases you make. Want to buy a list of people who read romance novels? Epsilon can sell you that, as well as a list of people who donate to international aid charities.

So if you're wondering why you received that catalog in the mail, it was probably because a store sold your purchase data to a broker.

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