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Google Criticized For 'Opaque' Audio-Listening Binary In Debian Chromium

An anonymous reader writes: Google has fallen under criticism for including a compiled audio-monitoring binary in Chromium for Debian. A report was logged at Debian's bug register on Tuesday noting the presence of a non-auditable 'hotword' module in Chromium 43. The module facilitates Google's "OK, Google" functionality, which listens for that phrase via a Chrome user's microphone and attempts afterwards to interpret the user's instructions as a search query. Matt Giuca from the Chromium development team responded after the furore developed, disclaiming Google from any responsibility from auditing Chromium code, but promising clearer controls over the feature in release 45.

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  1. Re:Turn off in Windows? by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Hotword detection is optional in Android. If you don't like it, just turn it off.

    The software which provides hotword detection on Android is also not auditable. How do you know it doesn't turn itself on when it detects that you're not looking at it, or monitoring it via adb? Oh no, I don't really think that it does either, but it's precisely the same concern as on Debian. You'd have to not install the google services to be sure you were avoiding it.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"