媒体巨头 CMG 吹嘘窃听手机、笔记本电脑或“智能家居”麦克风
Media Giant CMG Bragged About Eavesdropping On Phone, Laptop Or 'Smart Home' Microphones

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/media-giant-cmg-bragged-about-eavesdropping-phone-laptop-or-smart-home-microphones

一份泄露的演示文稿显示,数字广告行业的主要参与者考克斯媒体集团(CMG)开发了一款名为“Active-Listening”的人工智能软件。 据称,该软件可以捕获并分析来自支持麦克风的设备(例如手机、笔记本电脑或亚马逊 Alexa 等家庭助理)附近用户的“意图数据”或对话信息。 据称,该软件根据对话中提到的产品将普通讨论转化为有价值的广告内容。 这些幻灯片概述了一个六步流程,其中软件进行聆听,从对话中识别意图,将其与消费者行为模式进行匹配,并针对对某些商品表示兴趣的个人。 换句话说,如果您谈论丰田汽车,您可能会看到大量以丰田汽车为主题的汽车广告。 这种策略侵犯了许多人认为的隐私界限。 谷歌、Facebook和亚马逊已被确定为CMG服务的潜在客户; 然而,这三家公司此前均否认使用麦克风进行用户跟踪。 尽管如此,泄露的文件还是让人对他们的声明产生了怀疑。 消息披露后,谷歌切断了与 CMG 的关系,Meta 发表声明,宣布对 CMG 潜在的政策违规行为进行审查,亚马逊明确表示,他们与 CMG 就该计划没有任何往来。 然而,模糊性仍然存在,因为每家公司尚未完全排除未来与 CMG 合作的可能性(如果它们违反既定准则)。 根据 CMG 的说法,主动监听属于现有法律的范围,因为用户在接受与新安装的应用程序或更新相关的服务协议条款时同意这种做法。 因此,尽管存在伦理影响的担忧,但该技术在技术上仍然是合法的。 这一披露重新引发了围绕数字时代隐私保护的持续讨论,引发了人们对是否会执行更严格的法规,或者此类做法是否会继续扩散的担忧。

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原文

For years people have suspected that their smartphones, laptops, and home assistants were secretly eavesdropping on their private conversations. Now, a leaked pitch deck seems to confirm that our devices are, in fact, listening—and the implications are far-reaching.

Leaked slide via 404 Media

A leaked pitch deck presentation from Cox Media Group (CMG) - major player in the digital advertising space, appears to detail how its "Active-Listening" software uses artificial intelligence to capture and analyze "real-time intent data" from users' conversations. The presentation, obtained by 404 Media, lays out how CMG's software could listen to everything spoken near a microphone-equipped device—whether it's a phone, laptop, or home assistant like Amazon's Alexa, the Daily Mail reports.

Active-Listening: A Six-Step Process to Harvest Voice Data

The pitch deck outlines a six-step process for CMG's Active-Listening software, which turns seemingly benign conversations into targeted advertising gold. The first slide describes how the software listens to your conversations and extracts real-time intent data, which advertisers can then pair with behavioral data to target "in-market consumers." In simple terms, it means that if you mention a product or service in a conversation, advertisers can target you with ads for that very item.

For instance, if you're talking about Toyota cars with a friend, you might soon find yourself inundated with ads for Toyota’s latest models. This alleged use of private conversations for ad targeting represents a significant breach of what most people consider to be their personal privacy.

The slideshow goes further, showcasing tech giants like Facebook, Google, and Amazon as clients of CMG, suggesting they may use this controversial technology. These companies have long denied listening to user conversations through device microphones, but this leaked document raises new questions.

Tech Giants in Hot Water: Denials, Uncertainties, and Potential Backpedaling

Following the leak, Google swiftly removed Cox Media Group from its "Partners Program" website, a move that suggests a distancing from the controversial practice. Meta, the parent company of Facebook, responded by stating it is reviewing CMG for any potential violations of its terms of service. Meanwhile, Amazon declared that its advertising division "has never worked with CMG on this program and has no plans to do so." However, their spokesperson left the door slightly ajar, stating that if a marketing partner violates their rules, action will be taken.

The mixed responses leave the status of these relationships somewhat murky. Are these denials simply a strategy to buy time while the companies reassess their partnerships with CMG, or are they genuinely unaware of these practices?

Is Active Listening Legal?

Although the notion of listening to conversations may seem like an egregious violation of privacy, CMG claims it is entirely legal. In a now-deleted blog post from November 2023, CMG wrote, "We know what you're thinking. Is this even legal? The short answer is: yes. It is legal for phones and devices to listen to you."

The legality, CMG argues, comes from the lengthy and often-overlooked "terms of use" agreements that consumers must accept when downloading new apps or updates. Buried in the fine print of these agreements, the software's Active Listening feature is sometimes included, making the practice legally permissible—if ethically questionable.

This might explain how CMG operates in states like California, where wiretapping laws typically prohibit recording someone without their knowledge. If users unknowingly consented to these practices when they accepted an app's terms of service, then companies like CMG can claim they are within their rights.

A Long-Running Speculation, Now Potentially Validated

For years, users have speculated that their phones or tablets were eavesdropping on their private conversations, only to serve up eerily targeted ads shortly after. Tech companies like Facebook, Google, and Amazon have consistently denied these claims. Meta’s online privacy center even states, "We understand that sometimes ads can be so specific, it seems like we must be listening to your conversations through your microphone, but we're not."

However, the leaked pitch deck paints a different picture. It appears to confirm what millions have long suspected: tech giants and their marketing partners could be cashing in on what users say in the privacy of their homes.

New Revelations Spark Further Concerns

This revelation follows a series of similar findings that have ignited debates over privacy in the digital age. Just a day after the CMG leak, 404 Media exposed another AI marketing company, MindSift, which boasted on a podcast about using smart device speakers to target ads.

As more details emerge, the extent of privacy violations continues to grow. The question now is, what steps will regulators, companies, and consumers take in response to these revelations? Will there be a move toward more stringent privacy protections, or will these practices become more ingrained in the digital advertising landscape?

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