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by giggles_giggles
2390 days ago
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> In reality, bugging my residence isn't going to result in very interesting data. What exactly do you think is going to happen? This is literally "why do you need privacy if you have nothing to hide" in other words. What do I think will happen? I think someone at Amazon might be able to listen in on a conversation I have with my wife. I don't want a third party like Amazon to have a recording of things that I say to my wife because it's none of their business and I don't see a big utility trade-off in being able to ask a voice assistant how many quarts are in a gallon in exchange for letting Amazon record me in my private domicile. And frankly the only reason I carry a mainstream cell phone is because I'm socially required to do so. I don't find the argument of "Google can hear you already through your phone so why not install more microphones in your house" compelling. |
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I'm not asking "why do you need privacy if you have nothing to hide?". I'm asking why don't you have protocols in place that you can enable for private conversations? If I've got my phone on me, I assume Google and governments can hear anything in microphone range. You should too.
Only you can decide how you want to define your threat model, but "Google can hear you already through your phone so why not install more microphones in your house" should be a compelling argument if you've already established which areas of your house are meant to be private.
You could have no IoT devices and demand all occupants and visitors check their phones at the door, if that's how you choose to live. I'm not passing judgment on where to draw the line, but it doesn't make any sense to be afraid of Alexa devices in your living room while you're sitting on your couch scrolling through Facebook on your Android device and watching Netflix on your "smart tv".