Monday, March 18, 2024
Intel Patent Addresses Privacy Issues with Voice Assistants
The company filed a patent application for a “privacy preserving digital personal assistant.” Rather than sending your raw voice data to the cloud for processing, Intel’s tech encrypts that data to keep your personal information and identity from being shared in that environment.
“Existing digital personal assistant technologies force users to surrender the content of their voice commands to their digital personal assistance provider, and most actions of the available digital personal assistants are performed in the cloud,” Intel said in the filing. “This presents a large privacy and security concern that will only grow (over time) with increased adoption.” more
Friday, October 16, 2020
Woman Allegedly Hacked Ex’s Alexa to Scare off New Girlfriend
Double Feature!
An IoT Cautionary Tale...
A Crazy Ex Tale...
A jilted London woman allegedly hacked into her ex-boyfriend’s Amazon Alexa device and used it to scare off his new girlfriend, a report said.
Philippa Copleston-Warren, 45, was accused in a London court of using the virtual assistant to flash the lights inside her former boyfriend’s house on and off and tell his new sweetie to scram after he ended their relationship of two years, The Sun reported.
“The defendant spoke through the Alexa account to tell the complainant’s friend in the property to leave and to take her stuff,” prosecutor Misba Majid told Westminster Magistrates’ Court, according to the newspaper.
“This so distressed the girlfriend, it caused her to cry and she left.”
Copleston-Warren (inset), a management consultant, controlled the device from London, about 130 miles from her businessman ex-beau’s house in Lincolnshire, the paper reported.
She is also accused of hacking her ex’s Facebook account and uploading nude pictures of him. more
Spybuster Tip # 721: Learn how to adjust ALL the features of your digital assistant. This could have been prevented.
Tuesday, July 7, 2020
Digital Assistant Speakers Know More Than Just Their Names
To spot transgressions, researchers at the University of Darmstadt, North Carolina State University, and the University of Paris Saclay developed LeakyPick, a platform that periodically probes microphone-equipped devices and monitors subsequent network traffic for patterns indicating audio transmission.
They say LeakyPick identified “dozens” of words that accidentally trigger Amazon Echo speakers. more
More stories about Digital Assistant Speakers.
Thursday, April 2, 2020
Think Your Smart Speaker is Spying On You... get Paranoid
Their headline reads, "Blocks smart speakers from listening, while keep them voice-activated. Just say "Paranoid" before your usual commands." more
"How?" ...you may ask.
A. In one of three ways.
- The BUTTON model begins with the mute button pressed. When it hears you say, "Paranoid" it presses again, thus letting your next command to pass through. After your command is finished it re-mutes with another press.
- The HOME model (it appears) uses ultrasound to block the speakers microphones. Click here to learn how ultrasound blocking works. The volume needed for this application is very low so it shouldn't be a health risk.
- The MAX model requires you sending them your smart speaker so they can physically install their solution. People who use this option are not true paranoids. True privacy paranoids would be afraid the unit might come back, bugged!
Tuesday, November 5, 2019
With a Laser, Researchers Say They Can Hack Alexa and Other Assistants
But the risk presented by a cleverly pointed light was probably not on anyone’s radar.
Researchers in Japan and at the University of Michigan said Monday that they had found a way to take over Google Home, Amazon’s Alexa or Apple’s Siri devices from hundreds of feet away by shining laser pointers, and even flashlights, at the devices’ microphones. more
Thursday, October 24, 2019
Turning Amazon and Google Smart Speakers into Smart Spies
For eavesdropping, the researchers used the same horoscope app for Amazon’s smart speaker. The app tricks the user into believing that it has been stopped while it silently listens in the background. more
Google Accused of Spying with New Tool
The accusation, outlined in a memo obtained by Bloomberg News, claims severe unethical conduct from high-ranking Google employees, who they say allegedly ordered a team to develop a Chrome browser extension that would be installed on all employee machines and used primarily to monitor internal employee activity.
Employees are claiming the tool reports anyone who creates a calendar invite and sends it to more than 100 others, alleging that it is an attempt to crackdown on organizing and employee activism. more
Thursday, October 17, 2019
Welcome to our home. Your visit may be recorded for no apparent reason. Would you like a glass of wine?
Google hardware chief Rick Osterloh told the BBC that guests visiting a home where smart speakers are stored should be warned that their conversations might be overheard and recorded. more
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
The Peregrination of a Childhood Promise
- The now iconic 2-way wrist radio premiered in 1946 and was replaced with a 2-way wrist TV in 1964.
- 1952 prototype wrist radio.
- 1960's wrist radio.
- Apple watch Walkie-Talkie.
- FutureWatch: A "Real" Dick Tracy wrist radio watch. (Bluetooth)
- Wrist radios on ebay.
- Wrist radios on Amazon.
- In June of 1954, the radio was upgraded to increase the range from 500 miles to 1,000 miles, then again in 1956 to 2,500 miles.
It was then that Gould decided to call an inventor he had met, Al Gross (pictured above).
Al Gross was a man way ahead of his time with inventions such as the walkie-talkie. When Gross was just 16 years old, he already had an amateur radio operator's license and had built a ham radio going on to invent the first telephone pager in 1949.
When Gould stopped by, Al Gross had just recently invented a two-way radio that people could wear on their wrists, just like a watch. Gould asked Gross if he could use his idea and that’s where Dick Tracy’s wrist watch radio came into being. Gould was so appreciative that as a Thank You, he gave Gross the first four panels of the cartoon where Tracy is seen wearing and using the soon-to-be infamous gadget. The device proved to be the exact answer for Dick Tracy to rescue himself from the seemingly impossible situation.
Still on my list...
UPDATE - 8/27/19
Apple reportedly kills project to turn iPhone into 'walkie talkie'
Damn!
Monday, August 5, 2019
Amazon Alexa's New Dump the Human Eavesdropping Switch
Unfortunately, Amazon has never made opting-out of data collection on its devices particularly easy, and this new policy doesn’t buck that trend.
According to Bloomberg, users need to dig into their settings menu, then navigate to “Alexa Privacy,” and finally tap “Manage How Your Data Improves Alexa” to see the following text: “With this setting on, your voice recordings may be used to develop new features and manually reviewed to help improve our services. Only an extremely small fraction of voice recordings are manually reviewed.” more
Thursday, April 11, 2019
"Sooo, what are you wearing Mr. big, strong, Alexa man."
Sometimes, someone is.
Amazon.com Inc. employs thousands of people around the world to help improve the Alexa digital assistant powering its line of Echo speakers... more
Idea: Taunt them. "Sooo, what are you wearing Mr. big, strong, Alexa man."
Sunday, December 23, 2018
"Alexa, what’s my neighbor doing?"
A German Amazon customer was able to access hours of audio files from a stranger‘s Alexa device that included recordings of him in the shower thanks to a “mistake” by one of Amazon‘s human employees.
Amazon sent the customer a link that included 1,700 recordings of another man and his female companion when he asked to play back the recordings from his own Alexa voice assistant.
He reported the anomaly to Amazon, but the company did not immediately reply, except to delete the files. By then, he had already downloaded them. After weeks of no response from Amazon, the customer notified German trade c‘t, worried the company would just cover up the incident otherwise.
Using the information contained in the recordings, which included their first and last name, the name of their partner, where they lived – even audio of the person in the shower – c‘t was able to locate and the victim, who was... more
Yup, like I said two years ago. ~Kevin
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
Amazon Echo/ Google Home/ HomePod spying on you? Fight Back!
While manufacturers assure their customers of protecting their privacy, it often gets tough to believe in their claims.
Following some simple steps can ensure you aren’t spied by your smart speaker.
- Mute the microphone/camera when not needed...
- Turn up the volume to the max...
- Keep it disconnected from the Wi-Fi...
- Don’t give access to contacts...
- Turn off calling and messaging...
- Lastly, don’t buy one, if you are suspicious... more
Check here.
In other news...
Facebook is now delaying the release of its smart speaker, based on widespread fears of eavesdropping and unauthorized audio recording. Those fears appeared in a recent focus group conducted by the social network... or, Because There’s No Way In Hell Any Sane Person Is Buying That Right Now. more
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Alexa - Busted for Eavesdropping
"My husband and I would joke and say I'd bet these devices are listening to what we're saying," said Danielle, who did not want us to use her last name.
Every room in her family home was wired with the Amazon devices to control her home's heat, lights and security system.
But Danielle said two weeks ago their love for Alexa changed with an alarming phone call. "The person on the other line said, 'unplug your Alexa devices right now,'" she said. "'You're being hacked.'"
That person was one of her husband's employees, calling from Seattle.
"We unplugged all of them and he proceeded to tell us that he had received audio files of recordings from inside our house," she said. "At first, my husband was, like, 'no you didn't!' And the (recipient of the message) said 'You sat there talking about hardwood floors.' And we said, 'oh gosh, you really did hear us.'" more
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Hidden Smart Device Commands: Manchurian Candidate, or "Yes, master."
Over the past two years, researchers in China and the United States have begun demonstrating that they can send hidden commands that are undetectable to the human ear to Apple’s Siri, Amazon’s Alexa and Google’s Assistant.
Inside university labs, the researchers have been able to secretly activate the artificial intelligence systems on smartphones and smart speakers, making them dial phone numbers or open websites.
In the wrong hands, the technology could be used to unlock doors, wire money or buy stuff online — simply with music playing over the radio. more
Thursday, May 3, 2018
Audio Adversarial Examples: Targeted Attacks on Speech-to-Text
Given any audio waveform, we can produce another that is over 99.9% similar, but transcribes as any phrase we choose (recognizing up to 50 characters per second of audio).
We apply our white-box iterative optimization-based attack to Mozilla’s implementation DeepSpeech end-to-end, and show it has a 100% success rate.
The feasibility of this attack introduces a new domain to study adversarial examples. more audio examples
Wednesday, April 25, 2018
Digital Assistants: The Eavesdropping Attacks Begin
Then again, putting a mic in your home naturally invites questions over whether it can be used for eavesdropping—which is why researchers at the security firm Checkmarx started fiddling with Alexa, to see if they could turn it into a spy device. They did, with no intensive meddling required.
The attack, which Amazon has since fixed, follows the intended flow of using and programming an Echo. Because an Echo's mic only activates to send sound over the internet when someone says a wake word—usually "Alexa"— the researchers looked to see if they could piggyback on one of those legitimate reactions to listen in. A few clever manipulations later, they'd achieved their goal...
There are clear limitations to this eavesdropping approach. It would only have given attackers transcriptions, not audio recordings, of a target's conversations. more
Our advice to clients, "Keep these things out of offices and conference rooms where confidential discussions are held." ~Kevin
Saturday, December 16, 2017
Are Google and Amazon Patently Eavesdropping?
The findings were published in a report created by Santa Monica, California based advocacy group Consumer Watchdog.
The study warns of an Orwellian future in which the gadgets eavesdrop on everything from confidential conversations to your toilet flushing habits...
The study found that digital assistants can be 'awake' even when users think they aren't listening...
In fact, the devices listen all the time they are turned on – and Amazon has envisioned Alexa using that information to build profiles on anyone in the room to sell them goods. more