• Melody Fwygon
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    271 year ago

    This is why I generally ensure my phone is configured ahead of time to block ads in most cases. I don’t need this garbage on my device.

    As for how they could listen? It’s pretty easy.

    By waiting until the phone is completely still and potentially on a charger, it can collect a lot of data. Phones typically live on the nightstand by your bed at night; and could be listening intently when charging.

    Similarly it could start listening when it hears extended conversations; simply by listening to the microphone for human speech every x minutes for y minutes. Then it can record snippets; encode them quickly and upload them for processing. This would be thermally undetectable.

    Finally it could simply start listening in certain situations; like when it detects other devices (via BT). Then it could simply capture as many small snippets of your conversation as it could.

      • Melody Fwygon
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        251 year ago

        No.

        Both Android and iOS do enforce permissions against applications that have not been granted explicit access to listen constantly.

        For example, the Google Assistant is a privileged app oftentimes; and it is allowed to listen. It does so by listening efficiently for one kind of sound, the hotword “Ok Google”.

        Other applications not only have to obtain user permission; but oftentimes that permission is restricted to be only granted “While app is in use”, meaning it’s the app on the screen, notifying the user, in the foreground, or recently opened. This permission prevents most abuses of the microphone unless someone is using an app.

      • @noodlejetski@lemm.ee
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        121 year ago

        the phone’s processor has the wake up word hardcoded, so it’s not like an ad company can add a new one on a whim. and it uses passive listening, so it’s not recording everything you say - I’ve seen it compared to sitting in a class and not paying attention until the teacher says your name.

        • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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          111 year ago

          Have you seen this code though? Every time I hear a statement like that, I have to wonder if you’re all just taking their word for it.

          I don’t take their word for it, unless they show me that code and prove that it is the code running on all the devices in use.

            • Kilgore Trout
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              61 year ago

              Your rebuttal makes no sense.

              The issue with proprietary “smart” assistants is that we can only guess how they work.

            • @RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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              21 year ago

              No but I do review code audits that certified professionals publish for things that I use when they are available, and I also don’t use any voice assistants and only use open source smartphone ROMs such as GrapheneOS.

              Basically I use the opsec methods available to me to prevent as much of the rampant spying that I can. The last thing I would do is put an open mic to Amazon’s audio harvesting bots in my home because that’s incredibly careless.

        • There’s no way that an app with mic permissions could basically do the same thing and pick up on certain preprogrammed words like Ford or Coke which could then be parsed by AI and used by advertisers? It certainly seems like that isn’t out of the realm of physical possibility but I’m definitely no expert. Would they have had to pay the OS maker to hardcode it in to the OS? Could that be done in an update at a later time?

          • @noodlejetski@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            There’s no way that an app with mic permissions could basically do the same thing and pick up on certain preprogrammed words like Ford or Coke which could then be parsed by AI and used by advertisers?

            only if you want the phone to start burning battery and data while displaying the “microphone in use” indicator all the time.

            not to mention that the specific phrases have been picked in order to cause as few false positives as possible (which is why you can’t change them yourself), and you can still fool Google Assistant by saying “hey booboo” or “okay boomer”. good luck with making it reliably recognize “Ford”, lol.

      • @Tremont
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        51 year ago

        For that I think they use special hardware, that’s the reason that you can’t modify the calling word, and they still notify you when the voice assistant is disabled. I don’t know if this is actually true, or the companies try to hide behind this, or I just remember it incorrectly.