AI
This app will pay you $30 a day to record your phone calls for AI
Neon Mobile is flipping the script, offering users up to $30 a day for their phone calls to fuel AI innovation.

If you thought selling your old data to shady apps was peak dystopia, meet Neon Mobile—the app currently sitting pretty at No. 2 on Apple’s U.S. App Store charts.
Its pitch? Get paid up to $30 a day just for letting it record your phone calls. Yes, all of them. And yes, those recordings are then sold off to AI companies looking to stuff more human conversation into their models.
In exchange for lunch money, you’re essentially handing over your private chatter to fuel the same algorithms already being criticized for bias, misinformation, and deepfakes.
While Neon insists your calls are anonymized, privacy experts are already side-eyeing the actual risks—because nothing that starts with “we record everything you say” has ever aged gracefully.
The timing couldn’t be better: while users are monetizing their gossip sessions, Spotify is on the opposite crusade, scrambling to filter out AI-generated garbage tracks clogging its platform.
The streaming giant is also rolling out disclosure requirements for artists—basically a “Did you use AI on this song? Yes/No” checkbox for the creative Wild West we now live in.
This comes after complaints about AI impersonations of real musicians, which—shocker—artists aren’t thrilled about.
Put it together and you’ve got the current state of the music-meets-tech ecosystem: one app turns your private calls into training data for the next chatbot, while another builds safeguards against the very AI sludge that’s destabilizing entire industries.
Whether this is a new hustle or just another privacy nightmare waiting to implode depends on how many people are willing to cash in on their conversations. One thing’s certain: the bots are listening.
