Settings

Theme

We hid a free trip to Switzerland in our privacy policy

cape.co

68 points by bwoah 2 months ago · 16 comments

Reader

fallinghawks 2 months ago

"email us for a chance to win a free trip to Switzerland"

A chance to win is not enough motivation for me to actually write the email. I would assume it was simply an opportunity to collect email addresses, so I (personally) am not to likely to email them even if I did fully read their privacy policy.

  • krackers 2 months ago

    The fine print itself needs fine print, without any more details I'd assume that I have to pay for the plane ride there and they give me the crappiest hotel.

cryzinger 2 months ago

The implication here is kind of funny in that even if you do write legal stuff in language that your customers can understand, most of them still won't read it. And to be fair, I'm guilty of this more often than not.

altairprime 2 months ago

Previously:

Cell service for the fairly paranoid (33 days ago, 191 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47144325

Archonical 2 months ago

This is just an ad.

  • raldi 2 months ago

    "This is just a common publicity stunt."

    "No, it is an exceptional publicity stunt."

  • skrebbel 2 months ago

    But it's a nice ad!

  • tosti 2 months ago

    Does she know she's an ad?

  • jgorn 2 months ago

    A really smart ad for a privacy focused company.

    I, for one, appreciated finding this on HN as it gives me ideas for my own company where data privacy is a core feature.

focusedone 2 months ago

Smart PR move and motivation to read more privacy policies.

Looks like they only offer one plan, $99/month, which is pretty steep but must offset what other carriers make selling customer info. That's about double what I'm paying now but I do like the idea.

soopypoos 2 months ago

> In 2024 alone, the FCC fined major U.S. carriers $200 million for illegally selling subscriber location data.

Was that "you didn't put that in your privacy policy" or "your policy is illegal"?

kitesay 2 months ago

No one reads the fine print as they need the service.

  • lynndotpy 2 months ago

    I read the fine print and plenty of others do too. Corporations have convinced people they're powerless and illiterate when they're usually not.

  • g-b-r 2 months ago

    Maybe you don't.

    Some put off using the service and look for alternatives for as long as possible (often ever) if they're presented with tomes of legal documents to accept

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection