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Your steps, sleep, and heart rate are health data. AI can help you read the privacy policy you'd never read otherwise.
AI is great at summarizing privacy policies, but the choice of what to share is still on you.
Find one fitness app you use. Paste its privacy summary into AI and ask: 'Do they sell my data?'
Try this with a school, hobby, or family example where the stakes are low. Use the AI output as a draft you can question, not as the final answer.
12 questions · take it digitally for instant feedback at tendril.neural-forge.io/learn/quiz/end-builders-healthcare-AI-and-fitness-app-data-privacy-r10a9-teen
What is the main takeaway from "AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You — Quick Check"?
Which choice best fits the situation in "AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You — Quick Check"?
A learner studying AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You would need to understand which concept?
Which of these is directly relevant to AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You?
Which of the following is a key point about AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You?
What is the key insight about "Apps aren't HIPAA-covered" in the context of AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You?
What is the key warning about "Verify medical information" in the context of AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You?
Which statement accurately describes an aspect of AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You?
What does working with AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You typically involve?
In "AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You — Quick Check", which idea is most important to apply carefully?
In "AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You — Quick Check", which idea is most important to apply carefully?
In "AI and What Your Fitness App Actually Knows About You — Quick Check", which idea is most important to apply carefully?