Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Bloomberg

Wear This Device So the Boss Knows You’re Losing Weight

These are among the ethical questions still to be addressed about the appropriateness of companies tracking the physical activity of employees, said Harry Wang, a researcher for Parks Associates who has been studying the market. With wearable devices, collecting more sensitive information is likely to bring tougher government oversight, he said.

“There will be high levels of privacy, security and compliance requirements,” Wang said. “There will be high expectations from consumers about how the data will be used.”

From the article "Wear This Device So the Boss Knows You’re Losing Weight" by Adam Satariano.

Previously In The News

Blackout of CBS Enters Third Day After Negotiations Stall

As the most-watched television network, CBS ranks ahead of Comcast Corp.’s NBC, Walt Disney Co.’s ABC and 21st Century Fox Inc.’s Fox. Time Warner Cable, based in New York, has encouraged custo...

Time Warner Cable Drops CBS in Three Cities as Talks Fail

When a channel is dropped from a pay-TV service, 7 percent of subscribers end up switching providers, while 16 percent watch the lost channel online, according to a survey from Parks Associates, a...

Apple, Hollywood Studios Discuss Movie Plan

The number of Web-enabled devices that will be able to access content stored in such systems will grow to 780 million units by 2014 from more than 350 million this year, according to Parks Associat...

Parks Associates Invites Media to Attend 17th Annual CONNECTIONS(TM): The Premier Connected Home Conference at CTIA

International research firm Parks Associates invites media to attend the 17th-annual CONNECTIONS(TM): The Premier Connected Home Conference at CTIA, May 20-23, in the Venetian Hotel. CONNECTION...