How does bongo know your information




















However, most phones allow you to write longer messages. Try sending it again, or email us at [email protected] and give details of the question asked, including your mobile phone number, time and date and network operator. Bongo works thanks to a number of intelligent human researchers and a very sophisticated software application with a huge database.

Bongo reserves the right to review and make changes to its policies, service and charges without notice. You are only charged when you send Bongo an SMS. If you wish to stop receiving these messages you can unsubscribe from the service by texting STOP to. Bongo Classroom is an online classroom resource available to instructors in addition to the Virtual Classroom Blackboard Collaborate Ultra.

Bongo Classroom allows instructors to create a virtual classroom session or record video sessions within your module in Brightspace. On the next page, write your username and password 2. Navigate to the Scheduled Meetings page or the Assignment for which the meeting is scheduled learners. To begin your meeting, click the vertical ellipsis additional options button to the right of the meeting name.

Select Launch. Charges go straight onto your phone bill and so clearly, could quickly add up. It has been around in the UK for a while, growing to peak popularity in , but has since recently resurfaced having found a new audience thanks to some semi-popular YouTubers and Instagrammers, who took some time out of their busy schedule of taking pictures of their face and over-reacting to film trailers to dig up the old text service. It has attracted criticism for its marketing in the past, which has included handed wristbands out to students encouraging them to use the service.

The Bongo site makes it clear that you must be over 16 to use it. The Privacy Policy outlines how the company collects data and what they are allowed to do with it should you decide to use their service. Your name, age, address, address, bank account information and your email address are all fair game according to the Privacy Policy.

Hugo and Bongo are charging to offer information that may be freely available on the internet. There has been a revolution in how we seek both knowledge and advice. Increasingly, the answers to questions - whether joky or serious - are found not by asking an expert or consulting an authoritative text, but on our screens. Like so many aspects of digital life, this new mode of firing off questions is both wonderful and problematic.

If you want a quick concrete fact - say, who was the first female Oscar winner? And if you're going through major life issues - from having a miscarriage to coming out - it can help to ask questions of an online community experiencing the same dilemmas. It may be far less nerve-racking asking for help online than in person. Indeed, Lifeline Australia 13 11 14 recently launched its own online crisis support chat service, aimed at young people and country folk.

After running a pilot project, it found 57 per cent of users were assessed as at high risk of suicide, compared with 6 per cent of phone crisis contacts; but 37 per cent of online users said they would not have used a phone help service.

Lifeline's counsellors are, of course, trained to handle crisis situations. One of my concerns about moneymaking services such as Hugo and Bongo is what they would do if someone texted them with a life-threatening problem.

Hugo's website specifies that it provides advice ''for entertainment purposes only''. Bongo's marketing manager, Gregor Cooney, says messages are ''quality checked'' and staff are trained to refer them to a manager if ''alarm bells ring''.

Cooney also confirmed to me that Hugo and Bongo are the same enterprise - just with different target markets. Bongo's is to year-olds.



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