Google contractors regularly listen to and review some recordings of what people say to artificial-intelligence system Google Assistant, via their phone or through smart speakers such as the Google Home.
The company said that humans can access those recordings after some of its Dutch language audio snippets were leaked.
Google product manager David Monsees on Thursday acknowledged the leak in a blog post, and said that the company is investigating the breach.
“We are conducting a full review of our safeguards in this space to prevent misconduct like this from happening again,” he wrote.
More than 1,000 recordings were obtained by Belgian broadcaster VRT NWS, which noted in a story that some contained sensitive personal conversations — as well as information that identified the person speaking.
Google says no user account information is associated with the recordings and reviewers are instructed not to transcribe background conversations.
However, VRT reporters could hear spoken home addresses in some of the recordings, and were able to track down the speakers.
Some of these conversations were not directed at Assistant and happened either as background noise or as a mistaken recording when Assistant thought it was being spoken to, but was not.
Google did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.
Google says that contractors listen to recordings to better understand language patterns and accents.
Its user terms confirm recordings may be used by the company, stating that Assistant “records your voice and audio on Google services to improve speech recognition.”
Monsees wrote that Google works with contractors around the world to analyze the recordings.
“These language experts review and transcribe a small set of queries to help us better understand those languages,” he wrote.
Google’s terms do not explicitly say that people review the recordings, but do state that data could be analyzed as the company updates services or create new features.
The company acknowledged earlier this year that its reviewers listen to anonymous recordings in response to a Bloomberg report revealing that Amazon.com Inc’s Alexa also uses contractors to listen to recordings.
Amazon confirmed the report.
Google’s recording feature can be turned off, but doing so means Assistant loses some of its personalized touch.
People who turn off the recording feature lose the ability for the Assistant to recognize individual voices and learn voice patterns.
Assistant recording is actually turned off by default — but the technology prompts users to turn on recording and other tools to get personalized features.
Google Assistant is available on more than 1 billion devices, including smartphones and smart speakers.
It has made quite a dent in the smart speaker market — still the primary place where people use voice technology — but still trails behind Amazon.
Taiwanese firms have increased investment in the Philippines in recent years as Manila’s ties with Washington deepen and global supply chains continue to shift away from China, an expert at the Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) said yesterday. The Philippines had not been among Taiwanese investors’ top choices in Southeast Asia, CIER Taiwan ASEAN Studies Center director Kristy Hsu (徐遵慈) said at a seminar in Taipei. However, Taiwan’s investment in the country has grown significantly since the COVID-19 pandemic, reaching US $257 million last year, a high in recent years, she said. Although Taiwan’s total investment in the Philippines still lags
Intel Corp regards Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) as a longstanding partner, as the US chipmaker would continue outsourcing production of advanced chips to TSMC, Intel chief executive officer Lip-Bu Tan (陳立武) said yesterday. “I don’t look at people as competitors. I look at the collaboration... Nvidia is also, you know, a good friend,” Tan told a news conference following his keynote speech at the Computex trade show in Taipei. “It’s a very trusted partnership for us... We are a big, top customer for them, and we’re going to continue doing that,” he said, referring to TSMC, the world’s largest foundry
Artificial intelligence (AI) agents would supplant smartphones as the center of people’s digital lives, fundamentally reshaping personal devices and driving a major computing upgrade cycle, Qualcomm Inc CEO Cristiano Amon said yesterday. In his keynote speech for this year’s Computex trade show in Taipei, Amon said that the rise of "agentic AI" — AI systems capable of reasoning, planning and carrying out tasks autonomously — would transform how people interact with technology across phones, PCs, vehicles and wearable devices. Describing the technology as the next major evolution in computing, Amon said that "2026 is the year of agents.” For decades, smartphones have sat
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) yesterday said it would work with US chipmaker Intel Corp to jointly develop and deploy next-generation artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure and intelligent computing platforms in a move to capture booming demand for AI computing systems. Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康), said in a statement that the partnership would combine its global manufacturing scale, system integration expertise and AI data center deployment capabilities with Intel’s strengths in processor architecture, silicon technologies and software ecosystem. The companies said they plan to work on equipment used in AI data centers, including server racks powered by