But this one never really seemed to take off. The idea was they’d embed their listening tech into other apps, but as far as I can tell no other apps really wanted it because TV was already dying a death.
Plus if you’re going to record everything, why not voices. And on Android it tells you if an app access the microphone.
This is just one of those things that bigger tech killed.
Yeah, I vaguely remember it from when it was originally reported on, and all the articles about it seem to be from 10 years ago.
Apparently the tech is still in use, but it’s very niche. They can embed it into e.g. sports TV intended for broadcast in bars, and physically go to the bar with a phone app to check to see if they’re using the expensive public broadcast version, or the cheaper home version and then fine the venue for non compliance.
In the UK, they just broadcast with a pint glass in the corner of the screen instead.
It kind of relies on the belief that phones are always listening, while the truth is much worse IMO. They don’t need to. They’re tracking enough about you already.
Just think of the preinstalled installers, etc., which you can’t even see without root access. It’s crazy how many different types of tracking there are (generally).
Yeah, I know it was touted.
But this one never really seemed to take off. The idea was they’d embed their listening tech into other apps, but as far as I can tell no other apps really wanted it because TV was already dying a death.
Plus if you’re going to record everything, why not voices. And on Android it tells you if an app access the microphone.
This is just one of those things that bigger tech killed.
Your answer shows me that you understand what this is all about. That’s worth a lot when I look at the other answers.
Yeah, I vaguely remember it from when it was originally reported on, and all the articles about it seem to be from 10 years ago.
Apparently the tech is still in use, but it’s very niche. They can embed it into e.g. sports TV intended for broadcast in bars, and physically go to the bar with a phone app to check to see if they’re using the expensive public broadcast version, or the cheaper home version and then fine the venue for non compliance.
In the UK, they just broadcast with a pint glass in the corner of the screen instead.
It kind of relies on the belief that phones are always listening, while the truth is much worse IMO. They don’t need to. They’re tracking enough about you already.
https://cybernews.com/security/phone-listening-your-tv/
https://cybersnowden.com/ultrasound-tracking-beacons-in-mobile-ads/
https://media.ccc.de/v/33c3-8336-talking_behind_your_back#t=2
https://intellisec.de/pubs/2017a-eurosp.pdf
https://byte-sized.de/privacy/uxdt-was-ist-ultrasonic-cross-device-tracking/
And its still in use.
Just think of the preinstalled installers, etc., which you can’t even see without root access. It’s crazy how many different types of tracking there are (generally).