First, all apps out there have the capability to do this, once given the permission to do so. And yes, you do have to enable this feature for it to work at all, so you're in control.
Second, this feature only listens while you're posting (after you've explicitly enabled it), so it's not like it's doing this by itself while you're having super secret conversations (if it did you'd know because iOS makes the top bar flashing red while recording in the background).
Third, you should have some faith in the tech competence, morals, or at the very least legality of big companies. There are laws in place to ensure that your voice doesn't get "recorded indefinitely", and in the case of this feature, it's just finger printing the audio which means that the only data being used cannot reconstruct the original audio – only compare two pieces of audio to each other.
Lastly, if you don't trust this feature, you shouldn't trust anything else about the company either. I don't see how preventing this feature makes your life any more secure because if Facebook truly are using all your information against you, you've already given them more than enough. Not to mention that if there really was a conspiracy and they could record you without you knowing it, they'd hardly need to mask it behind this feature. If that was the case Facebook (or some other app like Skype) could just plain out record your microphone 24/7 anyway.
Yes but people are not really aware of the already present severe privacy implications Facebook has. They are suppressing or downplaying it like overweight people are pushing aside such thoughts while eating.
Every now and then when a new story or feature pops up that highlights that craziness, there is an outcry and nothing happens.
Same for overweight people. It is just human to set aside the reality.
The best way to stop Facebook from releasing this feature is to stop using Facebook. The users are their customers and the most impressionable feedback you can give to Facebook is to deactivate or delete your account.
I’m Aryeh Selekman, the product manager on Facebook’s optional audio recognition feature. I wanted to chime in here around some misunderstandings around how this feature works.
The feature is completely optional. You get to choose whether you want to turn it on or not. If you do turn it on, you can always turn it off at any time and your Facebook experience will not change.
If you do turn it on, the feature never listens to or stores your conversations. Here’s what happens after you turn the feature on. The app converts the sound into an audio fingerprint on your phone. This fingerprint is sent to Facebook's servers to try and match it against our database of known music and TV fingerprints. We do not store fingerprints from your device for any amount of time. These fingerprints can never be reversed into the original audio.
You will always get to choose whether you want to post about what you’re listening to or watching. Facebook will never automatically post about what you’re listening to.
In turn, if we don’t find a match, we log that we failed. We don’t store the fingerprint.
I hope this clears up a lot of common questions around the feature.
It's a cool idea, your phone listening to the world around it and reacting to it. Technology like this is probably inevitable. Someday people might even ask their phone to play back something from awhile ago, or to give them a transcript of a conversation.
I've been looking into something similar a while back and here are my findings:
Continuous speech recognition will have to improve, there are currently opensource solutions with the best being CMU Sphinx [1], it does however only listen to certain keywords thus isn't capable of understanding everything you say, and it needs training. There is a Google voice Recognition API, but that's not continuous so you'd still need to listen to certain keywords and then upload the bit to google and wait for result, which isn't perfect. Recently I've come across a few sites which seem to do just that using the google voice api [2,3], but likewise far from perfect.
When it comes to responding to you there are quite some good opensource projects out there such as Flite [4], MaryTTS [5], Festival [6] and of course e-Speak [7]. They don't sound that natural, and if you're willing to pay you can get much more high quality options [8]. I know you could again use google's text2speech, but don't forget there is going to be a delay you can't get rid of.
When it comes to the whole packet together I've seen Jasper, but he has his own problems, to give an example:
"
-> So Jasper, sup?
-< “Today in news... blah blah”
(meanwhile me) NO!! STOP! STAHP!
"
Google now seems to function pretty quickly and accurately on my Moto G, but once switching apps you get stuck.
Alyt at indiegogo [10] tries to market itself as what I'd love to see...
I'm sure there are more of these projects around, but I haven't seen one yet that is actually capable of learning new things on the fly or even having a little bit of personality (why personality? Because the best GTD-tool is still a whining person reminding you about it, not a monotone computer voice that you'll shut-off anyway). I can imagine though that's going to be tough to build; with a lot of machine learning, virtual neural networks, natural language engines, lisp-alike programming language and whatnot.
When I find free time on my hands I'd love to mess around with all these components and try to come up with a solution of my own, or probably after a re-watch of the movie Her (2013) (which was very interesting just for the idea it proposed!).
>As production techniques for hard drugs like cocaine and methamphetamines improve, cost of access has dropped significantly, leading to increased use of these substances in children. Technological progress is inevitable, so we might as well embrace it and accept the fact that children will be using hard drugs from now on.
Of course, that's an extreme example of the argument that has been used on HN a lot lately in favor of data collection, but it still gets the point across. Just because there's an industry push towards something doesn't mean that it's right.
Every phone call I place or receive on my phone gets recorded. It's been really useful quite a few times. I wouldn't mind having every single real world conversation recorded, as long as nobody steals them.
Do people think this will actually work? Isn't facebook generally already disliked by most, but used by all because everyone else uses it? What's going to happen if they put this in there? People will continue to not like it but use it anyway
They're not recording phone calls. It listens for information while you're posting a status, so it can include contextual info. I think the example listened and heard that the person was watching The Simpsons, so it included something about that below the status post
[+] [-] blixt|11 years ago|reply
First, all apps out there have the capability to do this, once given the permission to do so. And yes, you do have to enable this feature for it to work at all, so you're in control.
Second, this feature only listens while you're posting (after you've explicitly enabled it), so it's not like it's doing this by itself while you're having super secret conversations (if it did you'd know because iOS makes the top bar flashing red while recording in the background).
Third, you should have some faith in the tech competence, morals, or at the very least legality of big companies. There are laws in place to ensure that your voice doesn't get "recorded indefinitely", and in the case of this feature, it's just finger printing the audio which means that the only data being used cannot reconstruct the original audio – only compare two pieces of audio to each other.
Lastly, if you don't trust this feature, you shouldn't trust anything else about the company either. I don't see how preventing this feature makes your life any more secure because if Facebook truly are using all your information against you, you've already given them more than enough. Not to mention that if there really was a conspiracy and they could record you without you knowing it, they'd hardly need to mask it behind this feature. If that was the case Facebook (or some other app like Skype) could just plain out record your microphone 24/7 anyway.
[+] [-] john61|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] colept|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] aselekman|11 years ago|reply
The feature is completely optional. You get to choose whether you want to turn it on or not. If you do turn it on, you can always turn it off at any time and your Facebook experience will not change.
If you do turn it on, the feature never listens to or stores your conversations. Here’s what happens after you turn the feature on. The app converts the sound into an audio fingerprint on your phone. This fingerprint is sent to Facebook's servers to try and match it against our database of known music and TV fingerprints. We do not store fingerprints from your device for any amount of time. These fingerprints can never be reversed into the original audio.
You will always get to choose whether you want to post about what you’re listening to or watching. Facebook will never automatically post about what you’re listening to.
In turn, if we don’t find a match, we log that we failed. We don’t store the fingerprint.
I hope this clears up a lot of common questions around the feature.
[+] [-] Houshalter|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] larrybolt|11 years ago|reply
Continuous speech recognition will have to improve, there are currently opensource solutions with the best being CMU Sphinx [1], it does however only listen to certain keywords thus isn't capable of understanding everything you say, and it needs training. There is a Google voice Recognition API, but that's not continuous so you'd still need to listen to certain keywords and then upload the bit to google and wait for result, which isn't perfect. Recently I've come across a few sites which seem to do just that using the google voice api [2,3], but likewise far from perfect.
When it comes to responding to you there are quite some good opensource projects out there such as Flite [4], MaryTTS [5], Festival [6] and of course e-Speak [7]. They don't sound that natural, and if you're willing to pay you can get much more high quality options [8]. I know you could again use google's text2speech, but don't forget there is going to be a delay you can't get rid of.
When it comes to the whole packet together I've seen Jasper, but he has his own problems, to give an example:
"
-> So Jasper, sup?
-< “Today in news... blah blah”
(meanwhile me) NO!! STOP! STAHP!
"
Google now seems to function pretty quickly and accurately on my Moto G, but once switching apps you get stuck.
Alyt at indiegogo [10] tries to market itself as what I'd love to see...
I'm sure there are more of these projects around, but I haven't seen one yet that is actually capable of learning new things on the fly or even having a little bit of personality (why personality? Because the best GTD-tool is still a whining person reminding you about it, not a monotone computer voice that you'll shut-off anyway). I can imagine though that's going to be tough to build; with a lot of machine learning, virtual neural networks, natural language engines, lisp-alike programming language and whatnot.
When I find free time on my hands I'd love to mess around with all these components and try to come up with a solution of my own, or probably after a re-watch of the movie Her (2013) (which was very interesting just for the idea it proposed!).
[1]: http://cmusphinx.sourceforge.net/
[2]: https://dictation.io/
[3]: https://www.google.com/intl/en/chrome/demos/speech.html
[4]: http://www.speech.cs.cmu.edu/flite/
[5]: http://mary.dfki.de/
[6]: http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/
[7]: http://espeak.sourceforge.net/
[8]: http://stackoverflow.com/a/4721878/1807383
[9]: http://jasperproject.github.io
[10]: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/alyt-it-s-like-siri-for-y...
Best opensource text2speech results I've had with this blog post so far: http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=751169
PS: My apologies for the very long, unstructured reply but it intrigued me and I hope someone will find this small writeup useful!
[+] [-] chroem|11 years ago|reply
Of course, that's an extreme example of the argument that has been used on HN a lot lately in favor of data collection, but it still gets the point across. Just because there's an industry push towards something doesn't mean that it's right.
[+] [-] josu|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bhartzer|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] andrewflnr|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] return0|11 years ago|reply
Although i shouldn't be worried, this campaign will definitely work... /s
[+] [-] finnn|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] goatslacker|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] codva|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|11 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] finnn|11 years ago|reply
[+] [-] logicbased|11 years ago|reply