Several SoylentNews readers have submitted this story:
Amazon Echo is a voice-activated and cloud-connected speaker device that actively listens to a room using several microphones and communicates with Amazon servers to perform various queries and tasks.
Arkansas police filed what is believed to be the first request to retrieve information from an Amazon Echo device in a homicide investigation.
[...] Authorities charged Bates, 31, with murder earlier this year, but police in the Ozark city are now looking to find evidence on his Echo, according to The Information [paywalled].
[...] Amazon twice refused to hand over information requested by police, according to The Information, but gave them Bates' account information and purchase history.
The company said in a statement on Tuesday that it "will not release customer information without a valid and binding legal demand properly served on us."
[Continues...]
US police have issued Amazon with two search warrants which they have refused. More info is available from the BBC.
Difficult one this. I wouldn't have a device like the Echo in my home. But I can understand why people would want the device. Should have Amazon given up the data on request?
Editor's note: Also at Engadget, USA Today, and The Verge.
Original Submission #1 Original Submission #2 Original Submission #3 Original Submission #4
(Score: 4, Informative) by nobu_the_bard on Thursday December 29 2016, @03:11PM
It's a "smart house" toy sort of thing. It consists of a speaker and microphone built into a cylinder-shaped thing that link up to Amazon's cloud via the internet.
You can give it spoken commands and it can respond to questions (like asking for the weather), order stuff from amazon (except for certain categories of high-demand items like shoes), play music, and some other stuff. If you have "smart house" stuff like thermostats and lights it can control, you can link those up, so you can give it orders like "turn the lights down".
That should be enough to get what it is, more or less.