UK consumer group Which? finds some everyday items including watches and
speakers are ‘stuffed with trackers’
Air fryers that gather your personal data and audio speakers “stuffed with
trackers” are among examples of smart devices engaged in “excessive”
surveillance, according to the consumer group Which?
The organisation tested three air fryers, increasingly a staple of British
kitchens, each of which requested permission to record audio on the user’s phone
through a connected app.
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Tag - Privacy
An expert in digital forensics and family violence says surveillance by spyware
is rare – more often it happens via everyday features such as location sharing
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We’re looking for apps I don’t remember downloading, and which platforms can
access my smartphone’s camera or microphone; who else can see my calendar, my
notes, my emails.
We also check the basics: whether my device is actually registered to my name
and email address, and whether I have two-factor authentication turned on.
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The tech titans have picked up the phone and called the ex-president. Plus: AI
chatbots and sharing your baby’s photos
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Welcome back. Today in the newsletter: tech executives play phone tag with
Donald Trump, the liability of AI chatbots, and talking through sharing your
baby’s photos online with your family. Thank you for joining me.
The CEOs of the biggest tech companies in the world are looking at the
neck-and-neck polls, picking up their phones, and putting their ducks in a row
for a potential Donald Trump presidency. The former US president has never shied
away from threatening revenge against his perceived enemies, and tech’s leaders
are heading off retributive regulatory scrutiny.
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Tech companies aren’t transparent about what they do with our photos – we asked
experts about best baby-pic practices
Welcome to Opt Out, a semi-regular column in which we help you navigate your
online privacy and show you how to say no to surveillance. If you’d like to skip
to a section about a particular risk you’re trying to protect your child
against, click the “Jump to” menu at the top of this article. Last week’s column
covered how to opt yourself out of tech companies using your posts to train
artificial intelligence.
You’ve got the cutest baby ever, and you want the world to know it. But you’re
also worried about what might happen to your baby’s picture once you release it
into the nebulous world of the internet. Should you post it?
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Even if you haven’t knowingly opted in, companies are still scraping your
personal information to train their systems
Welcome to Opt Out, a semi-regular column in which we help you navigate your
online privacy and show you how to say no to surveillance. If you’d like to skip
to a section about a particular site or social network, click the “Jump to” menu
at the top of this article.
The competition to make the latest, greatest, most advanced artificial
intelligence thing has turned an already data-hungry tech industry ravenous.
Companies looking to build out their AI-powered search engines, smart email
composers or chatbots are scraping your posts and personal data and using them
to train those systems, which need ever-increasing amounts of text and images.
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Though the message has been shared by many users, including celebrities, it
offers no copyright or privacy protection
The “Goodbye Meta AI” message, which purports to protect the user from having
the likes of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp use their accounts as an AI
training camp, has become an increasingly common feature on timelines. It has
been shared by actors and sports stars – including James McAvoy, Ashley Tisdale
and Tom Brady – as well as hundreds of thousands of others.
But why – and what effect, if any, will it have?
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Public-facing staff in shops and frontline services are donning cameras to help
fight abuse and theft
When you work in security it can be a battle to stop people stealing. Most
thieves know that they have the same legal power as guards, and it’s not easy
trying to decide who gets to dole out “reasonable force” when a teenager’s
cutting through a bike lock in front of you.
My shift mates and I recently observed a heroin user cutting through our car
park repeating a shopping list into her phone: shampoo, school uniform, other
low order goods. She’s part of a growing number of people stealing for others,
focusing on stuff that people need but don’t want to pay for.
When to press buttons isn’t my only fear around BWCs. My job’s starting pay is
£11.44 per hour, the current minimum wage; the camera I wear retails for £534. I
don’t want to think about what happens if I damage it. Sometimes I feel my
uniform’s more valuable than I am.
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PM accused of ignoring civil rights and aping autocracies as he proposes new
powers after far-right unrest
Civil liberties campaigners have said that a proposal made by Keir Starmer on
Thursday to expand the use of live facial recognition technology would amount to
the effective introduction of a national ID card system based on people’s faces.
Silkie Carlo, the director of Big Brother Watch, said it was ironic the new
prime minister was suggesting a greater use of facial matching on the same day
that an EU-wide law largely banning real-time surveillance technology came into
force.
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‘Unpredictable’ privacy regulations prompt Facebook owner to scrap regional
plans for multimodal Llama
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Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta will not release an advanced version of its artificial
intelligence model in the EU, blaming the decision on the “unpredictable”
behaviour of regulators.
The owner of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp is preparing to issue its Llama
model in multimodal form, meaning it is able to work across text, video, images
and audio instead of just one format. Llama is an open source model, allowing it
to be freely downloaded and adapted by users.
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