Gadgets That Spy On Us: Way More Than TVs
Presto Vivace writes with a reminder that it's not just Samsung TVs — lots of other gadgets are spying on you
"But Samsung's televisions are far from the only seeing-and-listening devices coming into our lives. If we're going to freak out about a Samsung TV that listens in on our living rooms, we should also be panicking about a number of other emergent gadgets that capture voice and visual data in many of the same ways. ....
Samsung's competitor, the LG Smart TV, has basically the same phrase about voice capture in its privacy policy: "Please be aware that if your spoken word includes personal or other sensitive information, such information will be among the Voice Information captured through your use of voice recognition features." It isn't just TVs, Microsoft's xBox Kinect, Amazon Echo, GM's Onstar, Chevrolet's MyLink and PDRs, Google's Waze, and Hello's Sense all have snooping capabilities. Welcome to the world of Stasi Tech.
Hipsters and upper middle class snobs. They've already long ago handed over their privacy.
people wanted voice control and they got it
Come on slashdot, stop deleting the NSA hard drive backdoor news submissions, it's already all over the net, even non geek sites are all over it.
You call this a geek site? Stuff that matters my ass.
HUGE SPY PROGRAM EXPOSED: NSA has hidden software in hard drives around the world
Is the NSA Hiding in Your Hard Drive?
NSA Has Ability To Hide Spying Software Deep Within Hard Drives: Cyber Researchers
Is Your Hard Drive Hiding NSA Spyware?
The NSA hides surveillance software in hard drives
'Breakthrough' NSA spyware shows deep grasp of makers' hard drives
NSA planted surveillance software on hard drives, report says
NSA secret spying software discovered by Russian researchers
NSA Hackers Infected Hard Drives With Impossible-To-Remove Spyware
NSA Has Planted Surveillance Software Deep Within Hard Drives Since 2001: Kaspersky
NSA program is embedding secret spying software in hard drives in Russia, China, Middle East, allowing agency to eavesdrop on most of world’s computers: report
Destroying your hard drive is the only way to stop this super-advanced malware
Hard drives beware, the NSA is coming for you
Kaspersky fingers NSA-style Equation Group for hard drive backdoor epidemic
There's no way of knowing if the NSA's spyware is on your hard drive
The NSA's Undetectable Hard Drive Hack Was First Demonstrated a Year Ago
I don't own or use anything mentioned in that article and intend to keep it that way.
Is apparently how the average person and media assumed these devices worked.
I think that's a pretty harsh term. When used by a repressive regime this technology could be used for doing bad things but if people want voice commands in their lives they have to realize that some of this "snooping" is necessary. Why? Because voice processing and searching on the scale of some of the applications such as SIRI require centralized processing. Therefore your voice commands have to be sent someplace else and processed. Also this kind of technology isn't exactly new and things like Web Cams on laptops aren't immune from even local school districts snooping on students. The point is that the technology is introducing new possible attack vectors on your privacy and allowing not only corporations but even governments to potentially abuse your trust in the devices you use. I'm sure it's happened but I'll bet Apple has been subpoenaed for the SIRI requests from a suspected murderer or drug kingpin much like they'll ask Google for search queries from a suspect. That's why laws must be updated and the public made aware that there's a price to pay for all this ease of use. Oh in respect to LG, LG also says that any media you connect to their device will be potentially scanned including things like file names so start getting rid of those unused sex vids because the Chinese are watching your porn.
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
I have an LG TV and it has a stupid voice recognition feature. You have to press a button on the remote for it to start listening to you. The feature is pretty much completely useless. I tried it a few times when I first got the TV, but quickly found that it's pretty much worthless. The rest of the TV works really well though, and I have no complaints. I don't see the purpose of even building this feature into the TV. Nobody will use it, and nobody is going to make a TV buying decision based on rather or not it has voice recognition. Except maybe some people who will specifically be looking for a TV that doesn't have the feature.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
The first thing I saw when I open the article was "Like us on Facebook" :-)
An article about whats tracking us. But wont you just lets us track you as well before you read it.
especially when near/in the same room as your computers.
We need a lot more hardware limiters or at least notification that a devices video/audio input systems are active. With some of these "smart" tv's and other devices that are constantly listening it might be a bit more difficult, but there is no reason why your average phone, PC or other device to keep its mic/camera constantly powered. I'm reminded of that incident where school officials were spying on students using their school issued laptops, it was uncovered due to a simple LED light that officials tried to explain away as a "software bug" but was eventually revealed to be wholesale spying on students at school, at home and even in their bedrooms.
Especially not the XBone.
At least there is a case for OnStar, though I don't use it. You're sacrifice privacy for a service that could literally save your life.
With a Samsung TV, you're sacrificing your privacy so that you don't have to press a button on a remote control. Not worth it.
And that's the reason the Nazis lost: so full of themselves, couldn't admit when things went south. Great thing also, can you imagine a powerful Christian theocracy? Ah, you don't have to imagine, that's what America is becoming.
You're wrong, that specific use is correct.
I only play pre Game Cube consoles, pirate all my movies unless I find them for $2 at a pawn shop, still using older "no smart" LCD tv's. When time comes to replace the tv's to the projctors I go.
by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
I feel that most technically literate people at least knew that this kind of "spying" was technically trivial and obviously monetizable. Any device with some kind of a network connection and a microphone / camera can easily record everything you do and say and send it anywhere it wants. This little company called Google figured out that by collecting more and more information about you they can make huge sums of money by mining and selling that data and now everyone wants in on that game.
I feel like most comments here will be along the lines of "yeah duh what did you think they were doing with that data", however on less tech focused sites the comments will have the tone of "OMG evil corporations spying on us how is this even legal, hold on let me ask Siri!"
But that is the problem. The general population has no idea how every time they use a thing like Siri or Kinect, or OnStar they are allowing the respective companies that created those services nearly unlimited access to their microphone or camera. Just like people really don't understand how Facebook monetizes their profile and activities.
I think until there is general knowledge of the fact that we have entered the era of generating revenue from users through mining and analyzing their activities, preferences, and other data, we can't even have a productive discussion about the limits of these new ways to collect information. Right now it is just fear mongering and attention grabbing headlines.
Lets get to the point where we can have a rational discourse about the benefits and potential risks of ever present microphones and cameras and develop both moral and legal guidelines to govern their use.
It isn't just TVs, Microsoft's xBox Kinect, Amazon Echo, GM's Onstar, Chevrolet's MyLink and PDRs, Google's Waze, and Hello's Sense all have snooping capabilities.
Check, check, and check; I don't have any of those devices, I don't own a smartphone (Moto RAZR2 v9, and it's turned off most of the time anyway), and I don't even have a camera or microphone connected to any computer I own. I just bought a new TV, Samsung in fact, and it is NOT a 'smart TV', just a basic 39" HDTV.
Just don't buy these technologies in the first place.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
Basically every device that does voice recognition will do this. Voice recognition improves by having a MASSIVE database of samples to train on. They get these samples by capturing everything you say. For most devices, the voice recognition is done by some online service, not by the device itself. This lets them continually improve the recognition and save on device battery, but any sound heard by the device may be record and saved forever. There's probably a much greater privacy risk from the personal assistants than the TVs. But all need to be continually listening in order to identify your first command. The better ones may do this by processing for a keyword locally, then streaming audio back home when it's identified and dumber ones simply stream everything.
iPhone not mentioned in this summary, though it has been mentioned in the past that Siri was enough to get iPhones banned from secure locations.
Sounds a lot like an illegal wiretap doesn't it?
I always wondered how hard it would be for an ISP to hide a microphone in all their ADSL/Cable Box.
I've been saying for years all of these devices which want to be connected to the internet were a privacy and security shitstorm just waiting to happen.
That it's being shown as true is far from gratifying.
Corporations don't give a crap about your security or privacy.
Stop rewarding them with your money for some shiny baubles which are doing nothing but spying on you and monitizing everything you do.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Everyone knows that electrical tape on your laptop camera is a good way to protect your visual privacy from prying eyes, but how does one disable the microphones on such devices? I suppose pulling them apart and disabling the mic directly is one option but that can get pretty nasty, voids your warranty and can easily result in a broken device.
I am Izan Rammarg and I'd appreciate if you could stop using my name as an insult, even in reverse. Thanks.
You can't really "hide" a microphone in a piece of consumer electronics if you want it to be of any real use, either legitimate or for spying. Any halfway operational mic would stick out like a sore thumb the second someone with even moderate experience with electronics opened up the housing any well hidden mic would only hear conversations within a few feet of the device. The bigger risk is what I think is happening now, devices with "useful features" that "need" to listen to you all the time. Phones have always had a limit due to battery life and data limits, too much network activity and a consumer will catch on that something is causing their phone to use all of its data and need charging every 4 hours. But the only way you would know if wired devices were transmitting a lot of data is if your router/modem had some monitoring software on it to log what devices were using what amount of bandwidth.
Now you know why every cocksure developer is rushing to encrypt their traffic, SSL/TLS/HTML2 might secure the traffic from MITM/Gov but more importantly it protects the data from you inspecting the stream of data, good luck installing that wildcard cert on your TV/Gadget
Americans I don't know if it classes as a gadget but the authoritarian ones certainly are tools.
I live in a state where "all parties" must consent to be recorded. Even it can be argued that the owner "consents" by accepting the EULA, what about guests, family members and others that happen to be near the device? Are the the manufactures liable when there is no off switch for monitoring?
The summary of laws regarding consent and wiretap I use is "http://www.rcfp.org/reporters-recording-guide/introduction".
I use mine to store shit.
By default SIRI doesn't listen unless you press and hold then release the home button.
You can turn that off and if you do an iPhone would behave like those devices, also Apple could change the behavior to be always listening ina future update. However the have little incentive to do so as it'd add battery drain, and piss people off.
One advantage of paying the "Apple tax" is that because Apple makes their profit on the device they have no real incentive to piss you off or pander to advertisers/content creators at your expense.
Another LG TV owner here ...
I want to echo what the parent said. LG TVs are decent in general. The voice feature is just a gimmick added to make the company/product look cool. Perhaps it gains some WOWs when demoed in store. But in real life, its voice recognition is subpar, and the feature does not get used much. And yes, you have to press a button on the remote for the TV to listen (via a mic in the remote in my case).
2bits.com, Inc: Drupal, WordPress, and LAMP performance tuning.
TVs are just the most current in a long line of 'voluntary' surveillance. All of these things listen in on your conversation. Some of them even watch you. Carry them with you and they'll expose your location as well.
If you have a desktop system and leave your mic & camera plugged in when you're not using them, guess what?
If you send email without encryption, guess what?
EVERYTHING you do that is connected to the internet is telling somebody somewhere important secrets about your private life.
I'm so sick of this shit. I chose the wrong career. Anyone got a no-tech job I can have?
While surely there are many technically inept people who don't care, there are two distinct issues with the Samsung TV. The attempts to deflect blame don't change these two, and make Samsung look more untrustworthy.
1. Transparency - Burying the tidbit about sending your data to a 3rd party should not have happened. This should be a unique warning screen that a user must agree to before the service is activated. This leads directly to the main item, 2..
2. Always On - Samsung did something that even Apple lacked the balls to do, which is turn this on all the time. This is why full conversations can end up in third party hands, and not simply the example they keep droning as the only possible data "find me a tv show". "Always On" is validated by their documentation. Remember, this concept is for people that can't find (or are too lazy to get) the remote control.
I'd agree that you can't fix stupid! People that really don't give a shit deserve what's coming, assuming you notified them properly. Proper notification is not buried in the EULA 16X odd entries down. It's front and center and gets it's own mention _before_ activation. It is not hidden in legalese either.
TFA tries to claim that LG does the same thing, but what I found on the LG devices requires a user to push a button (not always on). Kinect we know is spyware, and numerous discussions here recommend yanking the power cord when it was not in use for this reason. PS3 and PS4 maintained (and made back a little) market share because of the security concerns with Kinect. Blah blah, it does not change Samsung it only points out other people we should also boycott.
In conclusion, any other company doing this needs to take the correct lesson from the feedback. Stop trying to bullshit people! Be transparent with the customers and offer flexible options to use the technology in an intelligent way. Simple right? Well, I won't hold my breath for a proper result because the more common solution today is to Spin it all with PR (which could be either Public Relations or PRopaganda).
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.