Wed Sep 26, 2007 10:53PM EDT
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I've been sitting on this one for a few days, but finally have gotten around to writing about it. It's a doozy: A company called Pudding Media has launched a web-based phone system that lets you call any phone number in North America and talk for free, as long as you want. The catch: The company listens in on your call and serves up ads based on what you're talking about.
Pudding is a VOIP operator, much like Skype, so you have to use a computer and a microphone or headset to make your calls. That's critical to the Pudding experience, as the ads are delivered on your computer screen (rather than via commercial-like audio interruptions). Of course, it wouldn't make sense for a human to listen in on your call and push a button to send you an ad. Voice recognition software listens for keywords. An example cited by the New York Times says that Pudding could offer movie reviews and ads for films if you're talking about the latest blockbuster.
Pudding says it does not keep recordings or logs of call content, but that's little consolation to those who find this an egregious privacy violation. For its part, Pudding says this is no different than what Google does with Gmail, offering ads related to what people are emailing you about, and arguably with more of a paper trail than a telephone conversation.
But is it? There's something indescribably different about a phone conversation than an email. It's more intimate, more personal. I'd have trouble using Pudding's system for all but the most trivial of phone calls. Still, I'd also have no problem trying it out and getting an account in case of emergencies. (I'm currently on the waiting list to join the beta, which you can join as well at thepudding.com.)
Would you give Pudding a try? More than once? Are free phone calls worth it? Be careful how you answer: Pudding notes that people actually change what they're talking about based on what the ads delivered on screen are. That's a little spooky, if you ask me.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
I learned from the readily available link, my copy of Puppy Linux isn't compatible. The result of the older version of the Flash Player, is the source of the incompatibility.
This might actually be fun. I can imagine having a conversation and getting ads, then talking about the ads. Heck, maybe this is the first step toward voice activated searching that's long overdue. "Computer, give me the history of pudding." Of course this does not excuse the company from choosing such a silly name. "Pudding"? What are we, three years old?
I have to throw this in. It often happens that the comments on these items are more entertaining and incisive than the article itself. Except maybe for this one. Lot of clever folks out there. Keep it up.
I find it to be a ridiculous idea, but I'll be interested to see how popular it becomes. It's only cause for alarm if lots of people start using pudding as more than a delicious dessert.
Kodak has introduced a printer that claims to cut printing costs by 50 percent. They plan to sell bl ...
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1 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 27, 2007 1:46AM EDT Report Abuse
Not for me.