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Link to information sourceWhat information does Siri collect and save?
Apple revealed that Siri stores a user's data for up to two years. Apple spokeswoman Trudy Muller told Wired.com that all queries are transferred to Apple’s data farm, where a random number is generated to represent the user. The user number is “disassociated" from the voice file after six months, but the voice data is kept for up to 18 more months for "testing and product improvement purposes".
“Apple may keep anonymized Siri data for up to two years,” Muller said. “If a user turns Siri off, both identifiers are deleted immediately along with any associated data.”
Link to information sourceIf you use Siri, privacy experts say you need to be concerned. Apple's voice-controlled personal assistant stores your commands and keeps them for years.
If you have Siri, you probably thought it was pretty cool. Just ask your phone a question or give it a command and Siri goes to work. What you may not know is that it collects that data and stores it for two years. University of Richmond Law Professor, Jim Gibson says if you use Siri, there's not much you can do to change it. "I think if you don't like it, the answer is not to use Siri," he says.
In Tech reports, Apple has said the data it collects is anonymous and is used to enhance Siri. "The good thing about Siri is that it doesn't actually tie your individual identification to the search, instead it takes you and other people like you, in that location and aggregates that for their use," Gibson explains.
Cyber Expert, DJ Rivera says while Apple claims data collected from Siri is anonymous, it wouldn't take much to tie the results back to you. "There is an identifier. It doesn't identify the person but it identifies the device and obviously, if you use Apple services, you have provided your information," Rivera explains.
Link to information sourceWhat kind of personal data does Amazon Alexa collect?
Alexa does listen to every word it can hear, but most of it is never stored or sent off to the cloud. Products like Alexa work by use of a "hot word" and an Echo or Fire TV has to listen for that word to operate. If it hears the hot word, it will shift gears and be ready to process what comes next. From Amazon's Alexa Device FAQ page:
Of course, everything electronic can be exploited and some older models of Amazon's Echo were vulnerable to a hack that had it record everything it could hear, but it required modifying the Echo itself and some soldering. For the most part, these things are safe because they stay locked up inside your home.
Once Alexa is initialized because the hot word was detected, what she can hear is then streamed to the cloud for Amazon to process. That's where things get a little worrisome for people who are privacy-conscious, but the reality is pretty benign.
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Comments
PERIOD!
Firefox has built-in non-tracking and disallows all 3rd party cookies, additionally Privacy Badger catches whatever Firefox might miss. For example, right here on MFO Privacy Badger has blocked www.google-analytics.com. Finally, AdBlock disallows most ads.
I check my cookies from time to time and clean house there.
So yes, of course there's a certain amount of personal information out there, mostly from public records, but there's not much that they can do with it. They know where I live, and probably that I detest Trump and his ilk. Good for them.
Here’s a good explanation of how shadow profiles work: https://howtogeek.com/768652/what-are-facebook-shadow-profiles-and-should-you-be-worried/amp/
I won't subscribe to any streaming service that uses advertising, and it's been many years since I bothered to watch any TV other than public broadcasting.
I may not be "off the grid", but I'm damned near off the advertising grid.
WOW !! Just in case you aren't aware, there is a button on the remote for fast forward. 5 minutes of ads take 15 seconds to get through.
A Blessed Sunday to you & family, Derf