As technology companies invaded Las Vegas for the annual Consumer Electronics Show this week, touting the ways their new products will make users’ lives easier, data privacy lawyers were helping craft the promises those companies could make about what happens to the personal data these products capture.
In the age of the “Internet of Things,” where pill bottles connect to the Internet to tell the pharmacy a refill is needed and viewers speak commands to their TVs, consumers are trading some private information for convenience, Duane Morris partner Sandra Jeskie said.
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