Amazon reportedly employs thousands of people to listen to your Alexa conversations

Authored by edition.cnn.com and submitted by dfc76
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New York (CNN Business) Not only is Alexa listening when you speak to an Echo smart speaker, an Amazon employee is potentially listening, too.

Amazon AMZN employs a global team that transcribes the voice commands captured after the wake word is detected and feeds them back into the software to help improve Alexa's grasp of human speech so it can respond more efficiently in the future, Bloomberg reports

Amazon reportedly employs thousands of full-time workers and contractors in several countries, including the United States, Costa Rica and Romania, to listen to as many as 1,000 audio clips in shifts that last up to nine hours. The audio clips they listen to were described as "mundane" and even sometimes "possibly criminal," including listening to a potential sexual assault.

In a response to the story, Amazon confirmed to CNN Business that it hires people to listen to what customers say to Alexa. But Amazon said it takes "security and privacy of our customers' personal information seriously." The company said it only annotates an "extremely small number of interactions from a random set of customers."

The report said Amazon doesn't "explicitly" tell Alexa users that it employs people to listen to the recordings. Amazon said in its frequently asked question section that it uses "requests to Alexa to train our speech recognition and natural language understanding systems."

si3rra_7 on April 12nd, 2019 at 11:15 UTC »

This is probably gonna get burried but on the same topic, everything you've ever asked your google home can be found AND LISTENED TO on myactivity.google.com . They literally store .mp3(or whatever) files of whatever you're saying to the google assistant.

hicks1012 on April 12nd, 2019 at 06:36 UTC »

Just FYI the information these employees are getting is the same information Alexa Skill developers receive.

Once while I was trying to debug my beta Skill I found parts of a very personal conversation from one of our beta testers in the error logs. Apparently part of the conversation activated Alexa and my Skill. I deleted the log of course.

I highly recommend you mute your mics on Google Home and Amazon Echos when not using them.

xy9876 on April 12nd, 2019 at 01:35 UTC »

I hope they like listening to Despacito.