• @[email protected]
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    -21 year ago

    That’s quite a terrible test though. I’m not a security expert but even I can think of quite a few ways they could’ve hidden traffic from such tests, even unintentionally. If Google is that evil, they know they have to be smart about it. And, unfortunately, they are both. So I wouldn’t trust anything but a complete software and hardware analysis, painstakingly checking every circuit and processor instruction. But then, why even bother, the whole thing is like hiring a child molester as a kindergarten teacher.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Oh, yes I agree. If you want to be malicious, you can think of many ways to go around it. You could use a physical switch that kills the circuit to the microphone and say “see? it’s physically impossible to listen if the microphone wires are not even connected!” and then hide a second microphone inside the speaker chassis. But unless you’re a valuable target, I prefer my Occam’s razor to be the appropriate kind of sharpness.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        Oh, they definitely want to be malicious. Afterall, their livelyhood depends on it, and there’s are literal tons of money on the table for knowing exactly the things that people don’t want to be known about them. That’s why I referred to them as pedos in kindergarten: they look like a data hoarding company, swim like a data hoarding company and quack like a data hoarding company. They might play it nice for now and test waters, but ultimately, what they are after all along is your personal data and especially private data. No way you can bet on them not acting upon this temptation.