half a moment.
Am I to understand that one gets recorded when using siri, or any of the others automatically...why? If Apple or Google or Amazon wants to improve how their voice services learn, you higher staff to do the testing, in house. Even the computer transcript business seems speaking personally, nonsensical.
There is a question here.
I have an unlocked IPhone. My goals will never involve using the phone for calls. Is there any value to me as a consumer locking this phone to a service?
Good on the guardian for cracking the story!
Karen



On Thu, 29 Aug 2019, Steve Matzura wrote:

Believe any of that, and I have a bridge you might want to buy. Just like Zuckerberg, they got caught with their pants down, and just like Zuckerberg, this won't be the last time.


On 8/28/2019 12:29 PM, M. Taylor wrote:
 Apple apologizes for Siri audio recordings, announces privacy changes
 going
 forward
 By Chaim Gartenberg, Aug 28, 2019, 11:07am EDT

 Apple has issued a formal apology for its privacy practices of secretly
 having human contractors listen to recordings of customers talking to its
 Siri digital assistant to improve the service. "We realize we haven't been
 fully living up to our high ideals, and for that we apologize," Apple's
 statement reads.
 The company also announced several changes to Siri's privacy policy:
 First, by default, we will no longer retain audio recordings of Siri
 interactions. We will continue to use computer-generated transcripts to
 help
 Siri improve.
 Second, users will be able to opt in to help Siri improve by learning from
 the audio samples of their requests. We hope that many people will choose
 to
 help Siri get better, knowing that Apple respects their data and has
 strong
 privacy controls in place. Those who choose to participate will be able to
 opt out at any time.
 Third, when customers opt in, only Apple employees will be allowed to
 listen
 to audio samples of the Siri interactions. Our team will work to delete
 any
 recording which is determined to be an inadvertent trigger of Siri.

 Apple was one of several major tech companies - including Google, Amazon,
 Facebook, and Microsoft - that was caught using paid human contractors to
 review recordings from its digital assistant, a fact that wasn't made
 clear
 to customers. According to The Guardian's report, those contractors had
 access to recordings that were full of private details, often due to
 accidental Siri triggers, and workers were said to each be listening to up
 to 1,000 recording a day.
 In the aftermath of that report, Apple announced that it would suspend the
 grading program that would see those recordings reviewed. "We are
 committed
 to delivering a great Siri experience while protecting user privacy," an
 Apple spokesperson said in a statement to The Verge at the time.
 Previously, Apple policy would keep random recordings from Siri for up to
 six months, after which it would remove identifying information for a copy
 that it would keep for two years or more.
 Per today's announcement, both the non-optional recording and the
 subsequent
 grading policies are now being suspended for good. Apple says it will no
 longer keep audio recordings from Siri unless a user specifically opts in.
 And in cases where customers do choose to give Apple their data, only
 Apple
 employees will have access (not, it would seem to imply, hired
 contractors).
 The company additionally promises that it will work to delete recordings
 of
 accidental triggers, which The Guardian's report claims were the main
 source
 of sensitive information.
 According to Apple's statement, the company plans to resume grading Siri
 recordings under those new policies later this fall, following a software
 update that adds the new opt-in option to its devices.

 Original Article at:
 https://www.theverge.com/2019/8/28/20836760/apple-apology-siri-audio-recordi
 ngs-privacy-changes-contractors



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