Facebook pulling off Onavo VPN app from Google Play Store: Report

IANS  |  San Francisco 

Following the scandalous revelation where was found to have been collecting data from teenagers using the "Research" app, the is now reportedly ending its unpaid market research programmes and taking its (VPN) app off the Google

was acquired by in 2013 for a reported $200 million to use its app to gather data about what people were doing on their phones.

"Facebook has decided that giving users a utility like a in exchange for quietly examining their app usage and mobile browsing data isn't a wise strategy. Instead, it will focus on paid programmes where users explicitly understand what privacy they're giving up for direct financial compensation," reported on Saturday.

Last year, due to privacy concerns, Apple forced Facebook to remove the app from the

"But Facebook quietly repurposed Onavo code for use in its app that was found paying users in the US and aged 13 to 35 up to $20 in gift cards per month to give it VPN and root network access to spy on all their mobile data," the report added.

Not only the is taking Onavo off the Play Store, it is also stopping recruitment of "Research" app testers.

"The company has repeatedly misread how users would react to its product launches and privacy invasions, leading to an unending news cycle chronicling its blunders. Without Onavo, Facebook loses a powerful method of market research, and its future initiatives here will come at a higher price," the report noted.

That analytics collected by Onavo VPN app prompted Facebook to purchase WhatsApp for which the company paid $19 billion in February 2014.

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, February 23 2019. 12:30 IST