The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Apple says contractor­s will stop listening to users via Siri

- By Hannah Denham

Apple announced Friday it would stop using contractor­s to listen in on users through Siri to grade the voice assistant’s accuracy.

An Apple whistleblo­wer had told the Guardian the contractor­s responsibl­e for “grading” the accuracy of the digital assistant regularly overheard conversati­ons about doctors’ appointmen­ts, drug deals and even couples having sex. Their job was to determine what triggered Siri into action — whether the user had actually said, “Hey, Siri” or if it was something else, such as the sound of a zipper.

Apple said it would suspend the global analysis of those voice recordings while it reviewed the grading system. Users will be able to opt out of reviews during a future software update.

“We are committed to delivering a great Siri experience while protecting user privacy,” said Cat Franklin, an Apple spokeswoma­n, in an email to The Washington Post.

Many smart-speaker owners don’t realize that Siri, Amazon’s Alexa and, until recently, Google’s Assistant, keep recordings of everything they hear after their so-called “wake word” to help train their artificial intelligen­ces. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post). Google quietly changed its defaults last year, and Assistant no longer automatica­lly records what it hears after the prompt “Hey, Google.”

Apple said it uses the data “to help Siri and dictation ... understand you better and recognize what you say,” Apple said. But this wasn’t made clear to users in Apple’s terms and conditions.

“There have been countless instances of recordings featuring private discussion­s between doctors and patients, business deals, seemingly criminal dealings, sexual encounters and so on,” the Apple whistleblo­wer told The Guardian. “These recordings are accompanie­d by user data showing location, contact details and app data.”

In response, Apple said that the recordings accounted for only 1 percent of Siri activation­s and lasted just a few seconds. They also were not linked to users Apple IDs.

The Apple whistleblo­wer said the Apple Watch and the HomePod, a smart speaker, were especially prone to accidental activation. A 2018 study from investment firm Loup Ventures found that HomePod’s Siri was accurate in answering standardiz­ed questions 52 percent of the time.

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