Smart speaker recordings reviewed by humans
Amazon, Apple and Google all employ staff who listen to customer voice recordings from their smart speakers and voice assistant apps.
News site Bloomberg highlighted the topic after speaking to Amazon staff who "reviewed" Alexa recordings.
All three companies say voice recordings are occasionally reviewed by humans to improve speech recognition.
But the reaction to the Bloomberg article suggests many customers are unaware that humans may be listening.
The news site said it had spoken to seven people who reviewed audio from Amazon Echo smart speakers and the Alexa service.
Reviewers typically transcribed and annotated voice clips to help improve Amazon's speech recognition systems.
Amazon's voice recordings are associated with an account number, the customer's first name and the serial number of the Echo device used.
Some of the reviewers told Bloomberg that they shared amusing voice clips with one another in an internal chat room.
They also described hearing distressing clips such as a potential sexual assault. However, they were told by colleagues that it was not Amazon's job to intervene.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 13 2019, @12:00AM
Or they *gasp!* were engaging in some BDSM or even acting out a rape fantasy.
But of course, strip *ahem* everyone of their rights first and worry about making everyone else submit second. Err.. the saying goes something like that, doesn't it?
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Do you know what's happening? no? then stfu and leave me alone. If I did so terribly I end up dead the police can subpoena the records to see how I got myself into that situation.