I generally agree with you. I think there's a few important things to note:
- Since Jam is a browser extension, its functionality only applies to the user that installed it (i.e., only you, not everyone that visits website X)
- All captured data stays locally in your browser until _you choose_ to submit a bug and its details*
- You can choose which sites the extension is enabled on if you want to further limit the scope of functionality
- We have some user preferences to enable/disable certain functionality of Jam already, and I'm confident we'll add more over time!
* to be fully transparent: we _do_ collect application telemetry so we can identify bugs and performance issues, but we take great care in reporting information that is centered around what our application is doing, not what it is capturing.
I generally agree with you. I think there's a few important things to note:
- Since Jam is a browser extension, its functionality only applies to the user that installed it (i.e., only you, not everyone that visits website X) - All captured data stays locally in your browser until _you choose_ to submit a bug and its details* - You can choose which sites the extension is enabled on if you want to further limit the scope of functionality - We have some user preferences to enable/disable certain functionality of Jam already, and I'm confident we'll add more over time!
* to be fully transparent: we _do_ collect application telemetry so we can identify bugs and performance issues, but we take great care in reporting information that is centered around what our application is doing, not what it is capturing.