It's not every day you get a straight up "our bad" from a tech giant.
Google announced in early February that its Nest Guard device — the hub for managing a Nest Secure home security system— would get an over-the-air update to make it compatible with Google Assistant, essentially giving it the abilities of a smart speaker.
Neat? Handy? Sure. But how this was even possible could be a cause for concern.
SEE ALSO: Nest Cam Outdoor shows me the cat lurking outside my homeIt turns out that Google built a microphone into the Nest Guard without disclosing this spec to users. According to a report from Business Insider, the lack of communication about the microphone was, apparently, an oversight.
"The on-device microphone was never intended to be a secret and should have been listed in the tech specs," a Google spokesperson told Business Insider. "That was an error on our part."
Tweet may have been deleted
What's the harm in including an accidentally secret microphone? It turns out that the mic has come in handy, with this Google Assistant integration. And the spokesperson told Business Insider that it could also be used for future security capabilities, like detecting breaking glass through sound.
But thanks to growing awareness about user privacy, and some troubling incidents involving smart speakers, the built-in microphones on home devices have prompted privacy concerns.
Companies have had to assure users again and again that they are not actively listening to our conversations, with some conflicting reports undermining these assurances. Hackers have proven that smart speakers can be hijacked. And in December 2018, Amazon sent over 1,000 audio recordings of an Alexa user to the wrong person; this displayed both how much audio data the company collects, and how easily this data can fall into the wrong hands, thanks to that pesky thing: human error.
Including a microphone on a Nest device without informing users adds to these misgivings — even if it was an "error." Customers should have had the informed choice to know whether they were bringing a microphone capable of listening in on the goings on in private spaces into their homes.
Google says that the microphone is not on unless users enable it as such. But that wouldn't necessarily stop malicious hackers from hijacking the system.
With the amount of data Google collects on us, what's another microphone, right? Maybe. But tech companies' biggest defense about data collection is that it's all about user choice; customers, they say, have the power to control what data they give to these companies. The inclusion of the microphone was a practical way of making a device more versatile, and potentially more useful, as technology developed. But users should have known. It was an "error" indeed.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Nest put a microphone in its security hub without informing customers-声闻过情网
sitemap
文章
896
浏览
525
获赞
41881
It's way too easy to accidentally reply to Instagram Stories
I used to love Instagram Stories.After long days at work, mindlessly tapping through Stories on theFacial recognition company scraped billions of photos to help the cops
A Facebook photo from the end of college could come back to haunt you. A New York Times deep-dive inU.S. politicians can now pay for sponsored content on Facebook
As the U.S. election season trudges forward, Facebook announced it will allow politicians and politiMelania Trump's cyberbullying pamphlets look A LOT like Obama's
Melania Trump stepped into her role as First Lady on Monday and launched BE BEST, an initiative to "Dog takes bite out of the mic during big local news interview
Some dogs were just born to be on camera.One pup, Stanley the Collie, recently made a big splash onTesla's Elon Musk trashes WhatsApp as coming with 'a free phone hack'
Elon Musk has some thoughts about WhatsApp. Specifically, the Tesla CEO thinks the Facebook-owned meMove over, yodel boy: These performers are doing it better
Is it time to move on from yodel boy?Since his Walmart performance of a Hank Williams song went viraTrump made the Mooch get shot in the butt because he's a germaphobe
Anthony Scaramucci was in the White House for only ten glorious days, but he's still bringing us allPrince Harry is 'over the moon' after Meghan Markle gives birth to a baby boy
The royal family has officially welcomed a new member.On Monday, the @sussexroyal Instagram accountKellyanne Conway calls Trump the 'commander of cheese'
Alternative facts queen Kellyanne Conway appeared on CNN's New Dayon Wednesday to discuss Tuesday'sBenedict Cumberbatch isn't interested in a job if there's no equal pay
If you have a role for Benedict Cumberbatch but his female co-stars aren't receiving equal pay, he'sElon Musk says Tesla's Solar Roof is going global later this year
Tesla's Solar Roof has had a rough start. Originally introduced in Oct. 2016, the Solar Roof was re-Twitter flags another Trump tweet for 'abusive behavior'
The dam has broken. Twitter once again slapped a label on a Donald Trump tweet Tuesday, writing thatBitcoin whale moves $1.1 billion in bitcoins for an $80 fee
Bitcoin hasn't (yet) fulfilled its original promise of being widely-used electronic cash, but it stiYouTuber Simone Giertz posts photo of 'super villain scar' after brain surgery
In true Simone Giertz form, Simone Giertz underwent brain surgery last Wednesday, and she's already