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,cat3korean | Adult Movies Online 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."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
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.
Topics Cybersecurity Google Assistant
India surpasses Britain to become world's fifth largest economyCraig Sager's final TV interview is both painful and beautiful to watchYou'll never guess who topped Zefr's list of biggest digital stars of 2016Twitter's chief technology officer Adam Messinger is leaving the company'Street Fighter V' kicks off Season 2 with updates and holiday skinsA startup will give you free birth control with the code 'Donald Trump''Ich Bin Ein Berliner' trends after Christmas market attackExtremely gracious teacher thanks 46 years worth of students on a billboardTwitter has quietly changed how its search worksNFL sends the wrong message over latest hit to Cam Newton's headChina chokes as it hits its worst air pollution levels of this year so farPagan priest finally allowed to wear goat horns in license photoTwitter's chief technology officer Adam Messinger is leaving the companyFacebook now lets you send festive cards...to yourselfAmazon Alexa to use KAYAK to track Santa this Christmas EveFacebook rolls out another method to make you watch Live videosElon Musk acted like an ecstatic child as SpaceX's rocket landed for the 1st timeHow Karun Nair cheated death and went on to score a triple tonLena Dunham says she wishes she had an abortion, and people are really madThis interactive map helps shoppers find black Trump and Cruz make out on giant billboard in GOP convention city Beyoncé slays all day with her gigantic ponytail Coffee shop finds clever way to inspire good manners in customers Elon Musk's very serious Boring Company uses Xbox controllers Turkey's president releases statement via FaceTime as country in chaos Sarah Jessica Parker agrees 'Sex and the City' was 'tone deaf' on diversity How Hurricane Florence overcame big odds to target the East Coast Kit Harington wants better queer representation from Marvel, bless him John Legend just achieved EGOT status, the youngest ever to do so Special Pokémon edition Nintendo Switch adores with Pikachu and Evee Well, that was fast: Trump/Pence campaign appears to have nixed phallic logo Tesla's super Toy guns banned outside Republican convention. Real guns allowed. 'Marvel's Spider Mastercard just changed its logo for the first time in 20 years In a world of e Obviously ‘Pokémon Go’ and Calvin Harris dominated Twitter this week PSA: Uninstall "Adware Doctor" from your Mac ASAP Simple typos tripped up Google's hate speech detection Norm Macdonald wants us to feel bad for Louis C.K and Roseanne Barr
2.6388s , 8224.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【cat3korean | Adult Movies Online】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network