Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Google will listen to conversati­ons again, but ask first

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

NEWYORK: Google workers will listen to audio snippets of people speaking to its digital voice assistant to help improve the product’s quality—if users give the company permission to do so.

Alphabet Inc.’s Google paused all human review of assistant audio in July after a Dutch contractor leaked some clips to a journalist, who was then able to identify specific people on the recordings. On Monday, Google said it’s bringing back human reviewers, but adding a new set of precaution­s to protect customers’ privacy.

Google and other companies like Amazon.com Inc. use human transcript­ion to check machine translator­s and make them smarter. The practice is widespread, but has made some users nervous that giant corporatio­ns are monitoring them.

Under the new Google policy, the company will tell users that their audio may be listened to if they opt in to a feature that also improves audio quality, Nino Tasca, a senior product manager on Google’s Assistant team, said in a blog post. The company also is trying to more accurately recognise audio that was captured accidental­ly. Usually, the assistant only listens when a person says, “Hey, Google,” but occasional­ly the computer might misinterpr­et something else as that “wake word”.

“We believe in putting you in control of your data, and we always work to keep it safe. We’re committed to being transparen­t about how our settings work so you can decide what works best for you,” the company said.

 ??  ?? Google is bringing back human reviewers, but adding a new set of precaution­s to protect customers’ privacy. BLOOMBERG
Google is bringing back human reviewers, but adding a new set of precaution­s to protect customers’ privacy. BLOOMBERG

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