Tech12:15 · 1h ago

Samsung Forces Health App Users to Share Sensitive Data for AI Training or Lose Sync Access

Now 14Right
Translated & summarized from Now 14 by baba
The story · English

Samsung has introduced a controversial update to its Samsung Health app that requires users to consent to sharing sensitive health data for artificial intelligence training. This mandatory consent affects all users who wish to continue syncing their health data with their Samsung accounts. Those who refuse will lose the ability to sync their data, and all previously synced health information will be permanently deleted from Samsung's servers unless legally required to be retained.

The data involved includes detailed health and wellness information such as heart rate, sleep patterns, medication history, medical records, and fertility cycle tracking. Alarmingly, Samsung disclosed that some of this data will be subject to human review to improve AI models, raising significant privacy concerns.

This update coincides with Samsung's upcoming Galaxy Unpacked event on July 22, 2026, where it plans to launch the Galaxy Watch 9 and new foldable phones, alongside an AI-powered health assistant designed to provide personalized coaching and advanced sleep analysis. To ensure the AI's accuracy, Samsung is aggressively collecting vast amounts of user data through these new terms.

Privacy experts and European regulators are already scrutinizing whether this forced consent complies with strict GDPR standards, which require freely given consent without coercion. For Israeli consumers, known for rapid tech adoption, this move signals a critical privacy warning. The key question remains whether the convenience of an AI health assistant justifies sacrificing medical confidentiality and handing over intimate personal data to a global tech giant.

Read the original at Now 14
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