@ibragimovnax: рустемчик #fyp #viral #magnificentcentury #sultansüleyman #rustempaşa

nàiki ²⁶
nàiki ²⁶
Open In TikTok:
Region: UA
Monday 15 June 2026 18:17:57 GMT
162548
28229
202
1354

Music

Download

Comments

krissava
киса🫦 :
или мехмед🫶🏻
2026-06-16 09:48:58
38
leleleulalala
🥷🏻_Julia_🥷🏻 :
Какой Рустем это Балибей
2026-06-16 13:24:47
1367
x_neverida
dark_mistress :
любить вв и не знать как выглядет Рустем ну жоска🙏
2026-06-16 18:26:56
141
user5131590606542
Баку❤ :
какой рустемчик, это Балибей лол
2026-06-17 16:36:07
37
vivalaverona
зорка верона✨ :
и оба бабники… 😔
2026-06-16 15:37:53
334
salta2013salta
𝓈𝒶𝓁𝓉𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓉 :
это Балибей...
2026-06-16 04:53:20
526
koha_11_28_
kauhar_996 :
А я ожидала Рустема 👀🤭
2026-06-16 17:43:32
33
onisenkovika670
vichkk.ii :
я вв посмотрела в 8 лет щас мне 14 до сех пор там нравится больше всех глент
2026-06-16 13:30:17
84
To see more videos from user @ibragimovnax, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

The Fine Print, Episode 3. What your doctor knows is protected by federal law. What your watch knows can be sold. Apple just paid $95 million to settle a lawsuit over their watches recording private conversations. Google paid $400 million for Fitbit tracking location after users turned it off. They settled. They paid. Your smartwatch knows your heart rate, sleep, stress, ovulation, pregnancy, where you go, who you sleep next to. None of that is HIPAA-protected. A 2025 Nature study reviewed 17 wearable companies. Most are vague about who they share your data with, why, and when. Here's where the data goes: - Flo Health settled with the FTC for sharing period data with Facebook and Google - Ovia got caught sharing pregnancy data with employers who paid for the app as a benefit - Life insurance companies are now using wearable data to set your premiums None of this requires HIPAA. None of this requires your direct permission. DO THIS TODAY: 1. Open the watch app on your phone. Turn off every permission you don't actually use. Especially location, microphone, and third-party app sharing. 2. Check the apps connected to your watch. Period trackers, sleep apps, fitness apps. Those are where the data leaks. 3. Read the privacy policies of those apps, not just the watch. THE FINE PRINT, EP 3 - SMARTWATCH SOURCES Apple $95M Settlement: https://www.bgr.com/2070262/smartwatch-selling-health-data/ Nature 2025 Wearable Privacy Study: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-025-01757-1 FTC v. Flo Health (period data settlement): https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2021/06/ftc-finalizes-order-flo-health-fertility-tracking-app-shared-sensitive-health-data-facebook-google Duke Engineering Privacy Analysis: https://pratt.duke.edu/news/privacy-in-the-age-of-the-smartwatch/ Wearable Data in Life Insurance Underwriting: https://www.wtwco.com/en-us/news/2025/08/wtw-and-klarity-collaborate-to-boost-insurance-underwriting-accuracy-by-harnessing-wearable-health Send this to your wife. Your mom. Your sister. Your daughter. The women in your life are the most exposed by what these things track. Follow @SmartWithAI2026. Because somebody has to read the fine print. #TheFinePrint #Smartwatch #Privacy #HealthData #SmartWithAI2026
The Fine Print, Episode 3. What your doctor knows is protected by federal law. What your watch knows can be sold. Apple just paid $95 million to settle a lawsuit over their watches recording private conversations. Google paid $400 million for Fitbit tracking location after users turned it off. They settled. They paid. Your smartwatch knows your heart rate, sleep, stress, ovulation, pregnancy, where you go, who you sleep next to. None of that is HIPAA-protected. A 2025 Nature study reviewed 17 wearable companies. Most are vague about who they share your data with, why, and when. Here's where the data goes: - Flo Health settled with the FTC for sharing period data with Facebook and Google - Ovia got caught sharing pregnancy data with employers who paid for the app as a benefit - Life insurance companies are now using wearable data to set your premiums None of this requires HIPAA. None of this requires your direct permission. DO THIS TODAY: 1. Open the watch app on your phone. Turn off every permission you don't actually use. Especially location, microphone, and third-party app sharing. 2. Check the apps connected to your watch. Period trackers, sleep apps, fitness apps. Those are where the data leaks. 3. Read the privacy policies of those apps, not just the watch. THE FINE PRINT, EP 3 - SMARTWATCH SOURCES Apple $95M Settlement: https://www.bgr.com/2070262/smartwatch-selling-health-data/ Nature 2025 Wearable Privacy Study: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41746-025-01757-1 FTC v. Flo Health (period data settlement): https://www.ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/2021/06/ftc-finalizes-order-flo-health-fertility-tracking-app-shared-sensitive-health-data-facebook-google Duke Engineering Privacy Analysis: https://pratt.duke.edu/news/privacy-in-the-age-of-the-smartwatch/ Wearable Data in Life Insurance Underwriting: https://www.wtwco.com/en-us/news/2025/08/wtw-and-klarity-collaborate-to-boost-insurance-underwriting-accuracy-by-harnessing-wearable-health Send this to your wife. Your mom. Your sister. Your daughter. The women in your life are the most exposed by what these things track. Follow @SmartWithAI2026. Because somebody has to read the fine print. #TheFinePrint #Smartwatch #Privacy #HealthData #SmartWithAI2026

About