Automatic Listening Exploitation Act would fine a company $40K for each recording their smart home device makes without a user’s permission

Authored by govtrackinsider.com and submitted by habichuelacondulce

Automatic Listening Exploitation Act would fine a company $40K for each recording their smart home device makes without a user’s permission GovTrack.us Follow Sep 6 · 2 min read

Amid reports of smart home devices recording couples having sex, what recourse should consumers have under federal law for such privacy violations?

Recent years have seen an explosion of “smart” or voice-activated home devices, most prominently the Amazon Echo and Google Nest. 21% of adults now own such a device. The rate of ownership is still surging, with 14 million people getting their first such device last year.

However, reports have detailed devices going rogue and occasionally recording audio of what users say or do without their permission or knowledge. For example, an Amazon Echo device accidentally recorded a couple’s private in-home conversations and sent the audio to random people in the owner’s contact list.

The Automatic Listening Exploitation Act would fine a company up to $40,000 for each recording made without a user’s permission. It would also allow a customer to demand the recording be deleted from the company’s archives.

Exceptions would be made for service improvements, such as to “improve the speech recognition and natural language understanding of the voice-user interface” or “help the voice-user interface to adapt to speech patterns, vocabulary, and personal preferences.” Considering that almost anything could conceivably be claimed by a company like Amazon or Google as a service improvement, it’s unclear how effective this bill would be.

It was introduced in the House on July 25 as bill number H.R. 4048, by Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA6).

Supporters argue that this very recent innovation in technology necessitates a corresponding update in federal law to combat its potential misuse.

“Smart speakers and doorbells are great, but consumers should have a way to fight back when tech companies collect more data than Americans have agreed to give up,” Rep. Moulton said in a press release. “More broadly, Congress should give Americans a bigger say in the data that companies collect. It’s time for a next generation of digital privacy laws, and it can start by holding corporations to their own privacy commitments.”

Although GovTrack Insider was unable to locate any explicit statements of opposition, the bill has not yet attracted any cosponsors. It awaits a potential vote in the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

Surely producers of some of the most prominent smart home devices, such as Amazon and Google, will exercise their lobbying might to kill this legislation. Google’s parent company Alphabet spent $21.7 million on lobbying last year, while Amazon spent $14.4 million.

This article was written by GovTrack Insider staff writer Jesse Rifkin.

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AdvancedAdvance on September 7th, 2019 at 16:38 UTC »

So the acronym for the act is ALExA? Bravo, lawmakers. Bravo.

Genesis2nd on September 7th, 2019 at 16:27 UTC »

Exceptions would be made for service improvements, such as to “improve the speech recognition and natural language understanding of the voice-user interface” or “help the voice-user interface to adapt to speech patterns, vocabulary, and personal preferences.” Considering that almost anything could conceivably be claimed by a company like Amazon or Google as a service improvement, it’s unclear how effective this bill would be.

There's that, and couldn't they update the ToS with some "By using this device you give permission to..." language?

sarduchi on September 7th, 2019 at 16:07 UTC »

How does it define ”permission”.