Conspiracy Theory Confirmed: Researcher Shows How Phones Show Ads Based on Conversations It Hears

in #news6 years ago


For years, smartphone users have been growing increasingly suspicious  that their devices are listening to them to feed them advertisements  and to “enhance their experience” on third-party apps. Companies like  Google and Facebook have consistently denied these claims, saying that  targeted ads and messages are merely a coincidence, and that data for  these services are taken in other ways. 

However, earlier this year during the Cambridge Analytica scandal we  began to see some of the first hints that our phones may actually be  listening to us. Cambridge Analytica whistleblower Christopher Wylie says that they have probably been listening all along. During an appearance before the UK parliament, Wylie said, “There’s  audio that could be useful just in terms of, are you in an office  environment, are you outside, are you watching TV, what are you doing  right now?” 

Since the scandal, experts who have studied this possibility began revealing their surprising results. In a recent interview  with Vice, Dr. Peter Hannay, the senior security consultant for the  cybersecurity firm Asterisk, explained how third-party apps exploit a  loophole to gather the voice data from your phone. 

Hannay said that while your microphone is always on, your voice data  is only sent out to other parties if you say specific trigger words such  as “Hey Siri” or “OK Google,” but there is a catch. Third-party apps  often ask to gain access to voice data in their user agreements to  “enhance the experience” of their products. 

“From time to time, snippets of audio do go back to [other apps  like Facebook’s] servers but there’s no official understanding what the  triggers for that are. Whether it’s timing or location-based or usage of  certain functions, [apps] are certainly pulling those microphone  permissions and using those periodically. All the internals of the  applications send this data in encrypted form, so it’s very difficult to  define the exact trigger,” Hannay said. 

While this process is becoming more obvious by the day, many tech  companies continue to deny that they are engaged with this practice, and  since all of the outgoing information is encrypted there is no way of  telling exactly which information they are getting and how they are  using it. 

“Seeing Google are open about it, I would personally assume the  other companies are doing the same. Really, there’s no reason they  wouldn’t be. It makes good sense from a marketing standpoint, and their  end-user agreements and the law both allow it, so I would assume they’re  doing it, but there’s no way to be sure.” Hannay said. 

Vice reporters then conducted their own experiment, saying random  phrases into their phones and then seeing advertisements affiliated with  those terms pop up in their news feeds. You can try this experiment at  home yourself, and it is highly likely that you have experienced results  like this by accident. 

In April, I experienced something like this when a friend visited my  house from the west coast. I picked him up from the Baltimore-Washington  airport and during a conversation about his flight, he told me that he  had a layover in Charlotte, North Carolina, and mentioned that they had a  nice airport. The following morning I woke up with these messages on my phone: 

 Oddly enough, I  have never been to Charlotte, North Carolina, never really thought  about the place, and have never typed anything about that place into  Google or Facebook. But sure enough, after having a conversation about  the airport in Charlotte, my phone thought I was interested. 

As of right now, there is no way to avoid this spying, aside from  being extremely careful about the apps that you sign up for, and  actually reading their user agreements—or getting rid of your cell phone  altogether, which could be counterproductive if you use it for  business. 

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Where is the evidence..? Some peeps just makes a claim?

thats why i suggested that you test it for yourself :-)

Is it not done by the location of the phone also? (not sticking up for apps at all, they blatently record everything, just because they can..)

Thats indeed a good point. Always do your own research. I do have a smartphone but without F.B. on it. Maybe in the future.

Anyway i did checked your source: Vice which i like btw. And with this i agree:

“Seeing Google are open about it, I would personally assume the other companies are doing the same.” Peter tells me. “Really, there’s no reason they wouldn’t be. It makes good sense from a marketing standpoint, and their end-use agreements and the law both allow it, so I would assume they’re doing it, but there’s no way to be sure.

Its def possible. Heard about this before there were even smartphones. But i dont think there is enough evidence that F.B. is actually listening. If they did i wouldn't be surprise though :)

This isn't a conspiracy. Why do you think all these apps ask for access to your microphone? So they can listen to you and sell data from you to advertisers.

They can deny this all they want but the evidence is clear. There was a story recently about an Alexa device "accidentally" recording a family's conversations. The reason this came out was because some malfunction or error somewhere along the way caused it to send the recording to one of the family's contacts instead of wherever it was supposed to go. I can't remember which news site covered this originally but it was also mentioned on a recent episode of the podcast, Deep Fat Fried.

lol which evidence? cause its not clear to me

Maybe "clear" is an overstatement but there is enough for me to be suspicious.

Hyperbole is fun sometimes, though lol.

Umbrella corporation has not remain a fictitious body. It is really working.

There are vans driving around in oslo,Norway with small umbrella corp stickers on them

Ha ha ha.

Think im joking!

Company's name is not important. What matters is the working of that company.

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To start with, disable "ask Siri." It must be listening all the time to detect you saying that. Then in Siri's setup under Siri Suggestions & Privacy, it says that Siri will learn from and make suggestions based on the selected Apps. Don't select any.

The recent privacy agreements have been pretty blatant in what they say they do, honest for a change. Can we argue that we agreed under duress?

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Would your wifi and bluetooth have a connection to your advertisement?
I mean if my phone's wifi is on, and is looking for open connection when I leave the house. Would my wifi connections notices that i'm at home depot and then suggest tools and home improvement stuff in my emails or ads, even though I didn't connect to home depot's wifi?

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