Samsung is warning customers to avoid discussing personal information in front of their smart television set.
The warning applies to TV viewers who control their Samsung Smart TV using its voice activation feature.
Such TV sets 'listen' to every conversation held in front of them and may share any details they hear with Samsung or third parties, it said.
Privacy campaigners said the technology smacked of the telescreens, in George Orwell's 1984, which spied on citizens.
Data sharing
The warning came to light via a story in online news magazine the Daily Beast which published an excerpt of a section of Samsung's privacy policy for its net-connected Smart TV sets.
The policy explains that the TV set will be listening to
people in the same room to try to spot when commands are issued. It goes
on to warn: "If your spoken words include personal or other sensitive
information, that information will be among the data captured and
transmitted to a third party."
Corynne McSherry, an intellectual property lawyer for the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which campaigns on digital rights
issues, told the Daily Beast that the third party was probably the
company providing speech-to-text conversion for Samsung.
She added: "If I were the customer, I might like to know who
that third party was, and I'd definitely like to know whether my words
were being transmitted in a secure form."
Soon after, an activist for the EFF circulated the policy statement on Twitter comparing it to George Orwell's description of the telescreens in his novel 1984 that listen to what people say in their homes.
In response to the widespread sharing of its policy
statement, Samsung has issued a statement to clarify how voice
activation works.
It said the privacy policy was an attempt to be transparent
with owners in order to help them make informed choices about whether to
use some features on its Smart TV sets, adding that it took consumer
privacy "very seriously".
Samsung said: "If a consumer consents and uses the voice
recognition feature, voice data is provided to a third party during a
requested voice command search. At that time, the voice data is sent to a
server, which searches for the requested content then returns the
desired content to the TV."
It added that it did not retain voice data or sell the audio
being captured. Smart-TV owners would always know if voice activation
was turned on because a microphone icon would be visible on the screen,
it said.
The third-party handling the translation from speech to text has not been named.
Samsung is not the first maker of a smart, net-connected TV
to run into problems with the data the set collects. In late 2013, a UK
IT consultant found his LG TV was gathering information about his
viewing habits.
Publicity about the issue led LG to create a software update
which ensured data collection was turned off for those who did not want
to share information.
Monday, 9 February 2015
samsung warns customer to stop discussing personal issue in front of tv
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