Los Angeles Times

Apple suspends ‘grading’ of Siri

Tech giant says it will review human analysis of voice commands after consumers raised privacy concerns.

- By Mark Gurman Gurman writes for Bloomberg.

Apple Inc. said on Thursday that it is suspending its global internal program for “grading” a portion of user Siri commands after some consumers raised concerns about the program.

The Cupertino, Calif.based technology giant employs people who listen to less than 1% of Siri commands in order to improve the voice-based digital assistant. Concerns over technology companies listening to and analyzing what is spoken to voice assistants started to be raised after Bloomberg News first reported that Amazon.com Inc. and Apple had teams analyzing recordings earlier this year. Last week, the Guardian reported that Apple contractor­s said they often hear sex, drug deals and confidenti­al medical informatio­n.

“We are committed to delivering a great Siri experience while protecting user privacy,” Apple said in a statement. “While we conduct a thorough review, we are suspending Siri grading globally. Additional­ly, as part of a future software update, users will have the ability to choose to participat­e in grading.”

The company’s move comes the same week that a German regulator temporaril­y stopped Google employees and contractor­s from transcribi­ng home assistant voice recordings in the European Union after whistleblo­wers said some recordings contained sensitive informatio­n.

A Hamburg agency said Thursday that Google agreed to a three-month stoppage while it investigat­es whether the practice complies with the EU’s General Data Protection Regucomman­ds. lation.

Bloomberg News reported in April that Amazon employs thousands of people around the world who listen to voice recordings captured by its line of Echo speakers in owners’ homes and offices, with the goal of improving its Alexa digital assistant.

The recordings are transcribe­d, annotated and then fed back into the software as part of an effort to eliminate gaps in Alexa’s understand­ing of human speech and help it better respond to Apple’s Siri also has human helpers. The recordings they review lack personally identifiab­le informatio­n and are stored for six months tied to a random identifier, according to an Apple security white paper.

The company doesn’t disclose directly in iOS that it uses a portion of recordings for its grading process, but it is mentioned in the white paper.

 ?? Kevork Djansezian Getty Images ?? PHIL SCHILLER, an Apple executive, at the unveiling of the Siri digital assistant in 2011. Apple employs people to listen to less than 1% of users’ Siri commands.
Kevork Djansezian Getty Images PHIL SCHILLER, an Apple executive, at the unveiling of the Siri digital assistant in 2011. Apple employs people to listen to less than 1% of users’ Siri commands.

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