Friday, December 30, 2016

Who's reading/listening to/watching whom? Chronicles, #4 - "A Secret Catalogue of Government Gear For Spying On Your Cellphone"

Who's reading/listening to/watching whom? Chronicles, #4 -

Remember when Tony Soprano said he never uses GPS, and he always used burner phones? Given he was a mafioso and all, that made sense, right? Why help the FBI track him?  But in recent years, even law-abiding "civilians" should be aware of the increasing number of ways their gadgets are contributing to invasions of privacy.

"A Secret Catalogue of Government Gear For Spying On Your Cellphone"

(By Jeremy Scahill & Margot Williams (December 17, 2015) | The Intercept)


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Who's reading/listening to/watching whom? Chronicles, #3: "The walls have ears: Warrant granted for Amazon Echo recordings", "Goodbye privacy, hello 'Alexa': Amazon Echo, the home robot who hears it all", "Virtual standoff: Amazon Echo vs. Google Home"", and "Amazon Alexa vs. Google Home and how they’re always listening"

Who's reading/listening to/watching whom? Chronicles, #3 -



  • Here's the article that inspired me to write this post:

"The walls have ears: Warrant granted for Amazon Echo recordings"


  • Here's another take on Alexa's intrusion on privacy:

"Goodbye privacy, hello 'Alexa': Amazon Echo, the home robot who hears it all

(by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Published Saturday 21 November 2015
We had Rory Carroll invite ‘Alexa’ aka the Echo into his home. There was helpful cooking assistance, endless facts and figures, an amusing misunderstanding – and concerns over what exactly Amazon does with all that interaction data
  • The privacy concerns  posed by Alexa apply equally to Google Home 



"Virtual standoff: Amazon Echo vs. Google Home"


Here's the creepy part, Amazon and Google keep an audio recording of each and every voice command you've issued to Alexa or Home in their respective servers.
Why so? Amazon claims that it keeps the recordings to improve and enhance your user experience. The Echo uses these recordings to fine tune its comprehension by creating your unique voice profile.
Google uses the voice data to make their services "faster, smarter, and more useful". This information is also used to provide a more personalized experience across all Google services.

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