• Fungah@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    My own theory is that they tokenize key words and phrases with an AI so that they’re not sending the actual audio data. Then it’s stored in a form some AI can parse but isn’t technically user data so they can skirt legislation around that.

    A tokenized collection of key phrases omitting delimiters in text format is going be much, much less than audio, or a transcript.

    • ben_dover@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      as someone who has played around with offline speech recognition before - there is a reason why ai assistants only use it for the wake word, and the rest is processed in the cloud: it sucks. it’s quite unreliable, you’d have to pronounce things exactly as expected. so you need to “train” it for different accents and ways to pronounce something if you want to capture it properly, so the info they could siphon this way is imho limited to a couple thousand words. which is considerable already, and would allow for proper profiling, but couldn’t capture your interest in something more specific like a mazda 323f.

      but offline speech recognition also requires a fair amount of compute power. at least on our phones, it would inevitably drain the battery

    • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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      11 months ago

      That certainly would make the data smuggling easier. What about battery though? I assume that requires inference and at least rudimentary processing.

      How would a background process do this in real time on a mobile device without leaving traceable evidence like cpu time?

      • BigPotato@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Cox also sells home automation bundles which advertise “smart” features like voice recognition which are always plugged into the wall.

      • BrownTree33@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        Can it be implemented on pc? They often turned on and people speak around them too. Cpu activity much harder to trace when there are a lot of different processes. Someone can blame their phone, while it listening pc near by.

        • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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          11 months ago

          Yeah outside mobile devices I imagine there’s a lot more leeway technically speaking. I’d be far more inclined to suspect a smart TV or a home assistant appliance like Amazon Echo, for example. And certainly there are plenty of PCs out there that are 100% compromised.

          But it’s the phone that people often think of as eavesdropping on their conversations. The idea is stickier perhaps because it’s a more personal violation. And I wouldn’t put it past data brokers by any means. They would if they could. I’ve just yet to hear a feasible explanation of how they can without being caught. Hence my doubt.