Your video calls could be racking more airmiles than you think

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We spend a significant part of our working lives video conferencing. Internal meetings, client discussions, board-level decisions, even clinical consultations. These are not casual conversations. They often involve information we would never put in writing, let alone share publicly.

And yet, most of the time, we don't question what happens to that data once the call ends. That's understandable. We shouldn't have to. The platform should just do the right thing.

Most video conferencing platforms are not designed with privacy as their primary objective. The call itself is just the interface. Beneath it sits an infrastructure built to move, process, and increasingly analyze communication data.

Features like transcription, summarization, and sentiment analysis are useful, but they depend on processing the content of conversations. That content has to travel, be handled, and in many cases be stored.

The assumption is that encryption solves the problem. It doesn't.

Data on...

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