| In fridge it takes images from different angles, and different floors to make sure it is possible to identify all the items that exist in that fridge. If you don't like certain foods, you can just customise the prompt that fridge sends to OpenAI. You can customise it through a web app or mobile app. > you would have to tell your fridge you're Jew or Muslim or lactose intolerant or diabetic. Don't you see an issue with this? What's the problem with storing your food preferences somewhere? People use dieting apps all the time on mobile. > You cannot avoid this 100% unless you go to extreme lengths, but if you can avoid sending data to one more company, why not? You are already sending your data in thousands of different ways and exposing yourself at any moment.
I'm not saying you should do more of it, but food preferences seems like a very minor drop in the bucket of all that you are already exposing. Most people store their images in a cloud, which already indicate amazing amount about them. Just using a smartphone is 1000x worse than having food preferences stored somewhere. |
I accept that when I Google something Google and maybe other companies know what I searched, because Googling things is useful. I cannot bring an encyclopaedia and a detailed map of the whole world with me all the time, so it's a tradeoff I can accept.
I accept that, on the rare occasions I turn geolocation, someone will know where I am, because if I do turn it on, it's probably because I got lost. Then I turn it off and off we go.
Divulging food preferences for... an AI that suggests me what I should buy doesn't look like it's worth it. And it's not just food preferences. Remember people store medications in their fridge. A fridge so advanced it can recognize any food is probably capable of reading labels and knowing I bought medication for X,Y and Z. Which is definitely something I'm not explicitly telling people (or things) without a reason.
And don't forget the power of correlating data. Correlating food preferences with other data you could easily understand if someone is ill, pregnant, whether they follow a certain religion (think Ramadan, or not eating meat on Friday,...), whether they are living with someone else (buying twice the amount of stuff they usually buy?) and so on.
This is all stuff I try to avoid telling everyone. Yes, my doctor could be hacked and people could know I'm on medication anyway (hypothetically), but why divulge that voluntarily for essentially no reason?