Amazon has unveiled a Kids Edition of its Echo Dot smart speaker:
The $79 Echo Dot Kids Edition takes the original device's design and wraps it in a kid-friendly, colorful case. Otherwise, the hardware is the same as the tiny smart speaker that debuted in 2016. While the regular, $49 Dot is considered a more affordable and accessible version of the regular Echo speaker, the Kids Edition costs more thanks to its bundled software. Amazon includes a two-year warranty plus a one-year subscription to the new Amazon FreeTime Unlimited service, an expanded version of Amazon's new FreeTime for Alexa.
FreeTime gives users "family-focused features" and new parental controls that adults can use to restrict what their kids can do with Alexa. Family features include "Education Q&A," allowing kids to ask Alexa science, math, spelling, and definition questions, "Alexa Speaks 'Kid,'" which gives Alexa kid-appropriate answers to nebulous statements that kids may say such as, "Alexa, I'm bored." Parents can also limit the times during which kids can speak to Alexa (like no talking to it after bedtime), restrict the skills kids can use, filter out songs with explicit lyrics, and more.
[...] But even with the added parental controls, some will be wary of a speaker designed to listen to their children. Like the original Dot, the Kids Edition has a mute button and parents can put the device in "sleep mode" to prevent it from responding to commands. However, the mic will always be listening for its wake-word just like other Echo devices.
In the new Parent Dashboard in the Alexa app and online, parents can monitor how kids are using their Echos (including all their utterances, or the phrases Alexa thinks it heard before trying to respond) and limit their abilities. According to a Buzzfeed report, Amazon claims it isn't making back-end profiles for users with data harvested from Alexa. While the virtual assistant can now recognize voices and provide personalized answers based on who's talking, the company maintains that data is only being used to make Alexa smarter and more tailored to each user.
(Score: 2) by fyngyrz on Wednesday April 25 2018, @08:16PM (3 children)
Yeah, no. They had a bug for a while. They fixed it. Keep googling.
(Score: 4, Informative) by Arik on Wednesday April 25 2018, @08:46PM (1 child)
And they can "fix it" back again any time they like.
This is EXACTLY what I mean when I say you can't trust it. The fact that they can do it is PROVEN correct by the fact they already did it! And no less so if they did it by accident. They can do it anytime they want, but more importantly, *so can others.* When you have a system that is fundamentally insecure by design, it's not just the manufacturer who can 'pwn' you at will, but also any number of other bad actors who can 'exploit' the same capabilities the manufacturer has, but who will NOT be deterred by any concerns about the manufacturers reputation.
And yes, you can be super paranoid and sniff all the traffic and inspect it constantly. And you have to watch it CONSTANTLY for this to be any good. It could behave exactly as it's supposed to until it receives an update, or possibly just a particular obfuscated command, and then suddenly it's a hostile device. This could happen in mid-sentence. It won't matter how closely you watched the traffic every day for the last 2 months if you aren't on the ball TODAY you won't even notice the change. Who wants to do that though? Who wants to pay good money for something that fundamentally can never be trusted and is always going to have to be watched like a hawk? In practice I doubt very much you are inspecting the traffic in real time, and even if you are the vast majority of owners will not.
Why not spend a few pennies more per unit and make them right?
Oh, what an old fashioned idea. The world economy would die overnight without forced obsolescence and landfills growing across once fertile landscapes. I forgot, carry on.
If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
(Score: 2, Insightful) by tftp on Wednesday April 25 2018, @10:38PM
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 26 2018, @12:06AM
It's always a bug, isn't it. Even the 100th time - "Ooops. Our bad. It's a bug."