Despite 300 mostly funny comments nobody has an answer.
Perhaps Apple could still tell, though, if they really wanted to.
If two people stand next to each other and talk about going to Las Vegas, and one person looks at flights to Last Vegas later on, you could probably show ads for flights to Las Vegas the person they were standing next to and have them click on it.
I've tried many times to explain to people things like that GPS satellites do not track you, and there are things you can do with your own phone which drastically cut down on tracking. There's no interest, no understanding that I'm simultaneously sharing their concerns while trying to tell them that they aren't powerless. They just think surveillance is a foregone conclusion, and then distance themselves and rationalize it any number of ways, and then share their nutty mechanism-of-action condemnations as a way of advertising their political tribe.
The practical upshot: Could one detect such activities based on accelerometer data? Surely yes. However, unless somebody trained it on masturbation, it is unlikely that that is an actual possible output of it.
Details: model format was more or less this
node {
int activity; //positive if this is the terminal
//node and this is the answer, else this is
//not terminal. Then it is the index of the
//input sample to read (times minus one) to
//compare to the next value
float compareWith;
unsigned gotoNodeIdxIfLessThan;
unsigned gotoNodeIdxIfGreaterOrEq;
}
model {
node nodes[];
}
You’d start at node [0] and walk the tree as per comparison instructions (index of input samples and float to compare to) till you reached a terminal node.(I cannot prove that the baseband chipset/software is betraying me by listening all the time. The point is you have to dig through most of the layers of avoidable surveillance to focus on the real technical flaws)
> every couples of months out comes some news about how you car was tracking you all these years.
Please try not to take this too personally, but this is the effect I'm talking about where it feels like all this complexity gets bundled into learned helplessness. Does your car have a cell modem? It so, "it is" tracking your location - meaning the cell provider(s) are obtaining your location, and most likely selling it to the surveillance industry, in addition to whatever your car manufacturer is doing. If you want to be assured that it's not, remove the cell modem or buy an older car without built in surveillance.
(I'm certainly not putting forth self-help options as a substitute for needed overarching privacy legislation like the EU's GDPR. They're both independent topics worthy of discussion)
Additionally, don't be mad when you find out later that companies know about your hyper-personal tendencies.
I don't have poor technical understanding. I am pointing out one of the loopholes companies are using to exploit customers: "privacy agreements."
If you want an in-depth technical analysis of how big tech does spy on you, just ask. I can provide a few case studies using OSINT and "hypothetical" speak, so as not to break NDA.
From 2 years ago: https://www.reddit.com/r/amazonecho/comments/lsqti3/very_lon...
"Very long time Echo user starting to have a pretty negative (and questionable) experience"
"Over the past couple months, I’ve noticed all of our more recently purchased devices have suddenly started reacting very erratic with voice commands. It’s not one or two devices in particular, but almost all of them. Saying ‘Alexa’ even when standing next to the Show 10 will oftentimes trigger responses to a device across the house as if the spacial detection is off, but it makes no sense as the device reacting couldn’t have possibly heard you. Additionally, we’ve had a lot of false activations and pulling up the history usually presents “Audio was not intended for this device” or “audio could not be understood”, but the recordings have absolutely nothing to do with Alexa, nor is anything remotely close to it present, and sometimes there simply isn’t anything listed for review. In the past the false triggers were uncommon, but when they occurred, they were consistently presented in the app to review and generally made sense. I even had a situation this week where the device in my kitchen kept activating and I was repeatedly yelling “cancel” and the damn thing kept going. I ended up muting the mic for a day as it was so frustrating."
Additional customer reports:
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/12oy2ch/alexa_gave_m...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/10urt54/strange_voic...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/wvl63y/woke_up_to_em...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/13wlul7/alexa_decide...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/14d9qn5/alexa_making...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/12v5c42/echo_dot_sta...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/12krjeu/echo_show_ra...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/10hi8gp/why_did_my_a...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/10dezgl/echo_show_pl...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/14buu3x/song_quiz_gl...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/13mcgbv/im_having_pr...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/rpdv5f/no_im_not_jok...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/12qahzo/i_swear_my_a...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/rti8bb/not_sure_why_...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/109kqh9/alexa_respon...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/10k1sn4/alexa_plays_...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/10zubgn/echo_auto_vo...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/1059n4h/light_random...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/14lbedt/alexa_blurts...
https://www.reddit.com/r/alexa/comments/11qy6ls/my_alexa_sai...
https://www.reddit.com/r/amazonecho/comments/11hz9l2/alexa_r...
https://www.reddit.com/r/amazonecho/comments/s6c5a1/amazon_e...
https://www.reddit.com/r/amazonecho/comments/whxb2j/why_are_...
https://www.reddit.com/r/amazonecho/comments/rqlmry/alexa_ha...
I'd be interested in hearing what you have to say from the technical side, in case it contains any information that is new to me. Personally, I model things such that if a closed software/system has access to some information, it will backhaul, store, and abuse that information (if not immediately, then in the future). I'm not going to hang my hat on a hope that some companies aren't functioning as optimal surveillance machines!
FWIW I don't find privacy policies themselves particularly enlightening because they're generally vague, equivocating, and subject to change at whim. Sure technically if there weren't a "privacy policy" then you might theoretically have some legal right of action to go after a company for abusing your information (although good luck demonstrating real damages, as always). But at least in the US that feels completely hypothetical.