Do smart speakers really eavesdrop on user privacy?
Recently, Consumer Watchdog, an American consumer protection organization, recently released a report saying that smart speakers of smart hardware players such as Amazon and Google are likely to "eavesdrop" on users' privacy.
It is reported that Amazon and Google described some scenes of identifying and monitoring family life for future home voice devices in their patent application reports, which made consumer supervision agencies think that the smart speakers they produced can obtain all kinds of information and transmit it to the server.
For example, family members' preferences for TV programs and their living habits can be obtained through the relevant new technologies they apply, which also shows that some users' private conversations and information transmitted through smart devices are also under the crisis of privacy exposure.
This sounds really chilling. To make smart speakers smarter, it is necessary for these devices to collect a lot of information from users, from some confidential conversations to their living habits. But when artificial intelligence completely invades your life, will such a smart speaker be what people originally expected?
The development of the industry is important, but who will protect the privacy of users? Is the price of developing smart speakers to monitor everything of users? Obviously, Amazon Google has to continue to work hard to effectively protect the privacy of users.
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