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 Personal Assistant Systems


Rethink AI Objectives

#artificialintelligence

Using AI to create humanlike computers is a shortsighted goal. When customers feel like no one is listening, they may be right. Or, they may be unknowingly talking to a machine. Last week, Google announced Duplex, an artificial intelligence (AI) assistant that can handle customer service requests, such as booking an appointment or providing basic information. We've had automated phone attendants for years, but the new buzz is that customers can't tell that this automated attendant isn't human.


Amazon Alexa-Powered Device Recorded and Shared User's Conversation Without Permission

WSJ.com: WSJD - Technology

Amazon.com Inc. AMZN 0.44% said that one of its Echo home speakers mistakenly recorded a private conversation and sent it to a person in the owners' contact list, an incident that raises questions about the security of such voice-operated devices. Confirming a report by a local television station in Seattle, Amazon on Thursday said that the Echo device misunderstood pieces of a conversation as commands, causing it to think it was being instructed to send the message. "As unlikely as this string of events is, we are evaluating options to make this case even less likely," a spokeswoman added in a statement. The incident was first reported by KIRO 7, which aired an interview with a Portland, Ore., user identified only as Danielle. The user said that one of her husband's employees had received a recording sent from inside her house.


More people were using speakers to make calls. Then came the story of 1 Portland family's eavesdropping Alexa

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

There is a lot you can do with Alexa. Here's how you can add skills. It was every Amazon Echo owner's nightmare. Alexa, the connected speaker, really, truly, was listening in on your conservations, and behind your back, passed on the recording of a private chit-chat to someone on your Echo contact list. This actually happened this week, according to Seattle TV station KIRO, which told the story of a Portland woman's privacy gone amuck.


Kagan: Why Google Home and Amazon Alexa can invade your privacy

#artificialintelligence

You love the idea of buying an AI and IoT device like Google Home or Amazon Echo for the holiday season. You want to speak and have it deliver a song or weather report or sports score. However, did you ever think about the other side of this coin? Here is a nagging question we all must wrestle with: As a technological innovation increases, how to we protect our personal information and privacy? AI and IoT devices like Google Home, Amazon Echo, Microsoft Cortana, Apple HomePod and countless others that are popping up in the marketplace are simply incredible.


Kagan: Privacy is only an illusion in a connected home

#artificialintelligence

Every coin has two sides. We've been talking for so long about all the coming benefits of wireless smart homes, connected homes and connected offices. And it's true, there are many incredible advancements in this space. However, there is an important warning I want to discuss. Everyone must understand other side of the coin which is seldom discussed, loss of privacy.


Centric Software Boosts PLM Power with Artificial Intelligence

#artificialintelligence

Building on its strategy to develop innovations that drive retail transformation for brands, retailers and manufacturers, PLM leader Centric Software announces the unveiling of its first artificial intelligence-based PLM module. Centric Software provides the most innovative enterprise solutions to fashion, retail, footwear, outdoor, luxury and consumer goods companies to achieve strategic and operational digital transformation goals. The term'artificial intelligence' dates back to the 1950's when computer scientist John McCarthy coined the phrase to describe the potential'thinking machines' of the future. Today, artificial intelligence (AI) tools are systems modeled on the problem-solving abilities of the human brain, breaking complex problems down into different layers of information comprised of many smaller problems. Applications vary considerably ranging from virtual assistants like'Alexa' and'Siri' to Netflix viewing recommendations to Amazon recommending things we might like to buy.


Non-Technical Person's Guide To Entering The Machine Learning Industry

#artificialintelligence

As the buzz around data science grows every day, there is a slew of self-taught professionals who have kick-started the machine learning journey with Andrew Ng's online courses. Many enthusiasts are gravitating towards the computer science field. But if one wants to pursue a career in Machine Learning, they need to be familiar with statistics and linear algebra. With computer science and ML applications becoming more pervasive in everyday life, people from a non-technical background are also interested in joining the field. In this article, we have discussed in-depth roles a person from non-tech background can explore in the data science/AI field.


After Amazon Echo misfire, ways to protect your own privacy

The Japan Times

NEW YORK โ€“ Revelations that an Amazon Echo smart speaker inadvertently sent a family's private conversation to an acquaintance highlights some unexpected risks of new voice-enabled technologies. According to Amazon, the fault was an "unlikely" series of inadvertent vocal cues that triggered the speaker, caused it to begin recording and then led it to interpret subsequent conversation as a "send message" request. There is no way to eliminate these sorts of privacy risks short of unplugging entirely. Kill the mic: Most smart speakers have a physical button to disable the microphone, so a private conversation can't be recorded to begin with. You can hit that when you are having sensitive conversations.


Alexa recorded a woman's private conversation and sent it to a random contact

#artificialintelligence

It's every smart home speaker owner's worst nightmare: a private message recorded and sent to a recipient without their knowledge. But that's what happened to a Portland woman, who told CBS News affiliate Kiro-TV that her Amazon Echo recorded an audio clip of her conversation and sent it to a person on her contact list. The woman, who declined to provide her last name to Kiro-TV, said she was alerted to the bug when the recipient of the message -- one of her husband's employees -- called her home to alert her that she'd been "hacked." An initial investigation by an Alexa engineer turned up no leads, according to the woman. But the engineer speculated that the Echo speaker "guessed" the command to send a message via Alexa Voice Messaging without asking for verbal confirmation.


6 ways to keep Alexa from eavesdropping on you

USATODAY - Tech Top Stories

An Amazon Dot, poised to take a command. SAN FRANCISCO-- After an Oregon family described a scenario that encapsulated the worst fears about owning a smart speaker -- their Amazon Echo picked up a private conversation and then shared it with the outside world -- you might ask: How can I prevent this from happening? Aside from unplugging your smart speaker for good, there are some safeguards you can use if you're one of the 40 million people who have these voice-activated speakers from Amazon or competitors Google Home and Apple HomePod. In the Portland, Ore. family's case, one of the several Alexa devices they had in their home misinterpreted conversations happening in the house as a command to first record a conversation and then send it as a message to a contact on the father's contact list. According to Amazon, Alexa twice asked for confirmation of the requests.