What does love have to do with it? Some of these apps are likely pre-loaded, so the app must be disabled at purchase if it is a corporate phone. What can you do with a BYOD besides the minimal protections listed in the article? Perhaps company phones should be owned and supplied by the company only. Then the apps can be limited and only the ones wanted can be loaded.
Potential security issues aside, anyone who uses a dating app on a company-issued phone is a moron. If the company owns the phone, they can demand access to it at any time, making any private dating information you have on there not so private. Unless you want your boss knowing that you cry during sex or that you can’t get off unless you’re wearing a diaper, keep your dating apps on your personal phone.
What does love have to do with it? Some of these apps are likely pre-loaded, so the app must be disabled at purchase if it is a corporate phone. What can you do with a BYOD besides the minimal protections listed in the article? Perhaps company phones should be owned and supplied by the company only. Then the apps can be limited and only the ones wanted can be loaded.
Potential security issues aside, anyone who uses a dating app on a company-issued phone is a moron. If the company owns the phone, they can demand access to it at any time, making any private dating information you have on there not so private. Unless you want your boss knowing that you cry during sex or that you can’t get off unless you’re wearing a diaper, keep your dating apps on your personal phone.