A few months back, we reported on the collision of the Internet of Things and sex toys. The maker of an Internet-connected, remote-controlled vibrator was sued in federal court for being a little too connected to its users: the company tracked various app settings such as vibration level and "temperature" without customer consent.

Standard Innovation, the company behind the We-Vibe vibrator, was extremely apologetic at the time. It also noted that no customer data was compromised and said that it was updating its privacy policy. But now, the company has "agreed" to settle the proposed class-action lawsuit (PDF).

According to Illinois federal court documents (PDF), the anonymous plaintiff—identified as "N.P."—and the company have mediated their dispute. They have "executed a Memorandum of Understanding ("MOU") regarding agreed terms for settlement of Plaintiff's claims on behalf of herself and a putative settlement class." A hearing is tentatively set for next month, and the actual settlement should be lodged in court by then.

The lawsuit alleged the We-Vibe vibrator app—which is on iOS and Android—tracks how often and how long consumers use the sex toy, sending that data to the company's Canadian servers. The suit said the app chronicles "the selected vibration settings" and the vibrator's "temperature," among other things.

Standard Innovation did not immediately respond for comment.