The Sunday Guardian

Google to review its voice recording privacy protocols

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Facing flak for letting contractor­s record and listen users’ conversati­ons via Google Assistant, the tech giant has announced to make some key changes in the way it records and reviews voice recordings.

Google Assistant users will now need to confirm if they want to be part of the Voice & Audio Activity (VAA) process, which stores and reviews conversati­ons.

“To store your audio data, you can opt in to the Voice & Audio Activity (VAA) setting when you set up your Assistant,” Google said in a statement late Monday.

“Opting in to VAA helps the Assistant better recognise your voice over time, and also helps improve the Assistant for everyone by allowing us to use small samples of audio to understand more languages and accents,” the company added.

You can view your past interactio­ns with the Assistant, and delete any of these interactio­ns at any time.

“If you’re an existing Assistant user, you’ll have the option to review your VAA setting and confirm your preference before any human review process resumes,” said Google.

Google is updating its settings to highlight that when users turn on VAA, human reviewers may listen to your audio snippets to help improve speech technology.

“We won’t include your audio in the human review process unless you’ve reconfirme­d your VAA setting as on,” the tech giant mentioned.

Google last month stopped listening and transcribi­ng Google Assistant recordings in Europe after Germany’s data protection commission­er said the country was investigat­ing reports that third-party contractor­s listened to users’ bedroom talks captured by Google’s Ai-powered Assistant.

Belgian broadcaste­r VRT NWS had reported that users’ conversati­ons with Google Home speakers were being recorded and audio clips were being sent to subcontrac­tors who then “transcribe­d the audio files for subsequent use in improving Google’s speech recognitio­n technology”, raising serious privacy concerns.

According to Google, audio snippets are never associated with any user accounts and language experts only listen to a small set of queries (around 0.2 per cent of all user audio snippets), only from users with VAA turned on.

“For those of you who have opted in to VAA, we will soon automatica­lly delete the vast majority of audio data associated with your account that’s older than a few months. This new policy will be coming to VAA later this year,” it noted. IANS

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