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Hacker my talking angela
Hacker my talking angela




However, genuine concern has been raised that the game's child mode may be too easy for children to turn off, which, if they did, would allow them to purchase "coins", which can be used as currency in the game, via iTunes. It's ill-written, and borders on being illiterate and incomprehensible." Bruce Wilcox, one of the game's programmers, has attributed the hoax's popularity to the fact that the chatbot program in Talking Angela is so realistic. Sophos employee Paul Ducklin wrote on the company's blog that the message being posted on Facebook promoting the hoax was "close to 600 rambling, repetitious words, despite claiming at the start that it didn’t have words to describe the situation. In 2015, the hoax was revived again on Facebook, prompting online security company Sophos and The Guardian to debunk it again. It is also impossible for a person to take control of what Angela says in the game, since the app is based on chat bot software. While it is true that, in the game with child mode off, Angela does ask for the user's name, age and personal preferences to determine conversation topics, Outfit7 has said that this information is all "anonymized" and all personal information is removed from it. The site's owners, Barbara and David Mikkelson, reported that they had tried to "prompt" it to give responses asking for private information but were unsuccessful, even when asking it explicitly sexual questions. Other versions of the rumor even attribute the disappearance of a child to the app, or claim that it is run by a paedophile ring, while some go so far as to even claim that the user is recorded by the camera and can be seen in Angela's eyes. The rumor, which was widely circulated on Facebook and various websites claiming to be dedicated to parenting, claims that Angela, the game's main character, asks the game's user for private personal information using the game's text-chat feature. In February 2014, Talking Angela was the subject of an Internet hoax claiming that it encourages children to disclose personal information about themselves, which is ostensibly then used by paedophiles to identify the location of these children. The app's successor, the My Talking Angela app, was released in December 2014. It was released on Novemand January 2012 for iPhone, iPod and iPad, January 2013 for Android, and January 2014 for Google Play.

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Talking Angela is a chatterbot app developed by Slovenian studio Outfit7 as part of the Talking Tom & Friends series.






Hacker my talking angela