Thanks for the thoughts and pointer to mycroft.ai, Thomas. I ought to look into mycroft.ai to learn more about its capabilities. As you say, open source, by its nature, tends to be less malevolent than proprietary solutions. Open source doesn't have the profit-motive agenda lurking in the background.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Thomas Delrue" <tho...@epistulae.net> To: "liberationtech" <liberationtech@lists.stanford.edu>, "Phil Shapiro" <pshap...@his.com> Sent: Thursday, April 19, 2018 3:00:56 PM Subject: Re: [liberationtech] Fwd: Now Anyone Can Create Their Own Personalized Alexa Skill in Just Minutes (Dropping mailinglists other than LibTech...) On 04/19/2018 09:22 AM, Phil Shapiro wrote: > I do not own an Alexa device and am wary of privacy issues in > general. If /you're/ wary of privacy issues, then why encourage others to use it? > At the same time, I think there are ways of using this device that do > not raise privacy concerns. I think you're wrong; I don't think there is a way to use this device in a way that does not raise privacy concerns, at all. The same is true for Google Home. Just like malware tries to establish persistence on your machines, these devices exist to establish persistence for their true owners - which ain't you. The parallels with malware go further than that, but I'll leave it there... If you really must do something like this, consider Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai/; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mycroft_(software) ) enclosed as a picroft (https://mycroft.ai/documentation/picroft/); it's not ideal, it still reaches out to someone else's servers, but at least it's open source, it's a start... and you can modify it to prevent it from doing that. There's a repository of skills, written in Python, over here: https://github.com/MycroftAI/mycroft-skills -- -- Phil Shapiro, pshap...@his.com http://www.his.com/pshapiro/briefbio.html http://www.twitter.com/philshapiro http://www.his.com/pshapiro/stories.menu.html "Wisdom begins with wonder." - Socrates "Learning happens thru gentleness." "We must reinvent a future free of blinders so that we can choose from real options." David Suzuki
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