DJI Osmo Pocket 3
Contents7
| Basic Information | |
|---|---|
| Release Year | 2023 |
| Product Type | Cameras |
| In Production | Yes |
| Official Website | https://www.dji.com/global/osmo-pocket-3 |
The DJI Osmo Pocket 3 is a 3-axis gimbal camera, released in 2023 by DJI[1]. During the camera's setup process, it forces the user to download, install, and use the DJI Mimo smartphone app. The installation process requires users to accept terms which include binding arbitration, and a class action waiver.[2]
Consumer impact summary
The device locks after 5 uses unless the owner installs the DJI Mimo smartphone app and completes a mandatory activation process.[1][3][2] That activation forces acceptance of DJI's terms of use, which include binding arbitration & a class action waiver.[4]
Privacy concerns
The Mimo app collects location data, device identifiers, and user content.[5]
App installation troubleshooting
For Android, DJI's support site provides APK sideload instructions for users who encounter installation problems.[6]
Incidents
Forced app activation
Despite having its own 2-inch touchscreen, 1-inch CMOS sensor, microSD storage, & 1,300 mAh battery, the Osmo Pocket 3 ships as a locked device.[3] DJI's official documentation states that the camera "requires activation through the DJI Mimo App" before first use.[1] DJI's activation instructions require a smartphone with Bluetooth & Wi-Fi enabled to connect to the camera through the Mimo app.[7]
The camera allows the owner to skip the activation prompt five times. After the fifth skip, the device locks & requires activation before any further use.[2] DJI's "Activating Your Handheld Products" support page documents the same 5-trial mechanism for the Osmo Action series.[7]
This is not unique to the Pocket 3. DJI's activation page lists the Osmo Action series, Osmo Mobile series, Osmo Nano, & Osmo 360 as also requiring Mimo-based activation.[7] By contrast, Amateur Photographer states that the competing FeiyuTech Pocket 3 is "ready to go straight out of the box without the need for an app."[2]
DJI Mimo app data collection
The DJI Mimo app required for activation collects data that Apple's App Store privacy label categorizes as "Data Used to Track You": contact info & identifiers.[5] The app also collects coarse location data, user-generated content (photos, videos, audio), usage data, & diagnostics.[5] Apple's listing notes the app "may use your location even when it isn't open."[5]
A 2020 analysis by cybersecurity firm River Loop Security found that the Mimo app integrated a third-party SDK from MobTech, a Chinese analytics company, which transmitted device information including brand, model, display size, OS version, carrier data, & geolocation to MobTech's servers without encryption.[8] River Loop concluded that "even without user consent, the DJI Mimo app sends sensitive information via unsecured means to third-party servers, where the Terms of Use Agreement supports cooperation with the Chinese Government."[8] The analysis also found weak AES-128 ECB encryption with deterministic key construction, meaning that "even seemingly encrypted data sent from a user's device could be recovered from a moderately talented attacker, let alone a Nation State."[8]
On Android, DJI's support site instructs users who have trouble installing the app to download the Mimo APK directly from DJI's website.[6]
Binding arbitration & class action waiver
Activating the camera through DJI Mimo requires agreeing to DJI's Product Terms of Use (last updated December 22, 2025), which state in their preamble that "all disputes between you and DJI Entities will be resolved by binding arbitration."[4] Section 11 contains the full arbitration framework, administered under the Federal Arbitration Act & governed by American Arbitration Association (AAA) rules.[4]
Section 11.6 bars collective legal action: "CLASS ACTION LAWSUITS, CLASS-WIDE ARBITRATIONS, PRIVATE ATTORNEY-GENERAL ACTIONS... ARE NOT ALLOWED."[4]
DJI's terms do not offer a general opt-out from the arbitration clause for new users. The only opt-out mechanism applies to future modifications of the clause: users can reject changes within 30 days, but doing so terminates their DJI account, and the prior version of the arbitration clause survives.[4] The camera requires activation through a DJI account,[4] so account termination raises the question of whether the owner can continue using already-activated hardware or must reaccept the current terms.
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "A Beginner's Guide to Osmo Pocket 3". DJI Support. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Mold, Dan (2025-07-06). "The DJI Osmo Pocket 3 may be the world's favourite vlogging camera, but for me it has one HUGE drawback". Amateur Photographer. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Osmo Pocket 3 - Specs". DJI. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 "DJI Products Terms of Use". DJI. 2025-12-22. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 "DJI Mimo on the App Store". Apple App Store. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 "Failure to Download and Install the App". DJI Support. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 "Activating Your Handheld Products". DJI Support. Retrieved 2026-03-29.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 "Analyzing Data Use by the DJI Mimo App". River Loop Security. 2020-05-12. Retrieved 2026-03-29.