Is your phone listening to you? The truth about Active Listening Technology

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Have you ever experienced the eerie feeling that your phone is listening to your conversations? You're not alone.

A recent exposé reveals that marketing agencies like Cox Media Group use AI-powered "Active Listening" software to monitor and analyze conversations near your phone. But what does this mean for our privacy? And how can we protect ourselves from this invasive technology?

Share your thoughts

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Cox Media Group admits using your phone to listen to conversations: Report​


Your long-held suspicions are confirmed, according to a report: Your phone really is listening to you.
A marketing firm whose clients include Facebook and Google has privately admitted that it listens to users’ smartphone microphones and then places ads based on the information that is picked up, according to 404 Media.

Cox Media Group, the television and radio news conglomerate, admitted in a pitch deck to investors that its “Active Listening” software uses artificial intelligence to “capture real-time intent data by listening to our conversations,” according to the report.

"Advertisers can pair this voice-data with behavioral data to target in-market consumers,” the company wrote in the pitch deck.

CMG noted in the deck that consumers “leave a data trail based on their conversations and online behavior” and that the AI-powered software collects and analyzes said “behavioral and voice data from 470+ sources.”

The slideshow includes claims that Facebook, Google and Amazon are clients of CMG.

Google removed CMG from its “Partners Program” website after it was contacted by 404 Media to comment on the matter.

“All advertisers must comply with all applicable laws and regulations as well as our Google Ads policies, and when we identify ads or advertisers that violate these policies, we will take appropriate action,” a Google spokesperson told The Post.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, admitted that it was reviewing CMG to see whether it violated any of its terms of service.

“Meta does not use your phone’s microphone for ads and we’ve been public about this for years,” a Meta spokesperson told The Post.

“We are reaching out to CMG to get them to clarify that their program is not based on Meta data.”

An Amazon spokesperson told 404 Media that its advertising arm “has never worked with CMG on this program and has no plans to do so.”

The company said that it would take action against any partner that violates its rules.

Last December, MindSift, a New Hampshire-based company, bragged that it used voice data to place targeted ads by listening to people’s everyday conversations through microphones on their devices, according to 404 Media.

The report revealed the existence of CMG’s “Active Listening” feature.

“We know what you’re thinking. Is this even legal?” the company wrote in a since-deleted Cox blog post from November 2023.

“It is legal for phones and devices to listen to you. When a new app download or update prompts consumers with a multi-page term of use agreement somewhere in the fine print, Active Listening is often included.”

 
Have you ever experienced the eerie feeling that your phone is listening to your conversations? You're not alone.

A recent exposé reveals that marketing agencies like Cox Media Group use AI-powered "Active Listening" software to monitor and analyze conversations near your phone. But what does this mean for our privacy? And how can we protect ourselves from this invasive technology?

Share your thoughts

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cox Media Group admits using your phone to listen to conversations: Report​


Your long-held suspicions are confirmed, according to a report: Your phone really is listening to you.
A marketing firm whose clients include Facebook and Google has privately admitted that it listens to users’ smartphone microphones and then places ads based on the information that is picked up, according to 404 Media.

Cox Media Group, the television and radio news conglomerate, admitted in a pitch deck to investors that its “Active Listening” software uses artificial intelligence to “capture real-time intent data by listening to our conversations,” according to the report.

"Advertisers can pair this voice-data with behavioral data to target in-market consumers,” the company wrote in the pitch deck.

CMG noted in the deck that consumers “leave a data trail based on their conversations and online behavior” and that the AI-powered software collects and analyzes said “behavioral and voice data from 470+ sources.”

The slideshow includes claims that Facebook, Google and Amazon are clients of CMG.

Google removed CMG from its “Partners Program” website after it was contacted by 404 Media to comment on the matter.

“All advertisers must comply with all applicable laws and regulations as well as our Google Ads policies, and when we identify ads or advertisers that violate these policies, we will take appropriate action,” a Google spokesperson told The Post.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, admitted that it was reviewing CMG to see whether it violated any of its terms of service.

“Meta does not use your phone’s microphone for ads and we’ve been public about this for years,” a Meta spokesperson told The Post.

“We are reaching out to CMG to get them to clarify that their program is not based on Meta data.”

An Amazon spokesperson told 404 Media that its advertising arm “has never worked with CMG on this program and has no plans to do so.”

The company said that it would take action against any partner that violates its rules.

Last December, MindSift, a New Hampshire-based company, bragged that it used voice data to place targeted ads by listening to people’s everyday conversations through microphones on their devices, according to 404 Media.

The report revealed the existence of CMG’s “Active Listening” feature.

“We know what you’re thinking. Is this even legal?” the company wrote in a since-deleted Cox blog post from November 2023.

“It is legal for phones and devices to listen to you. When a new app download or update prompts consumers with a multi-page term of use agreement somewhere in the fine print, Active Listening is often included.”


This is unacceptable.

These companies should face lawsuits.
 
Have you ever experienced the eerie feeling that your phone is listening to your conversations? You're not alone.

A recent exposé reveals that marketing agencies like Cox Media Group use AI-powered "Active Listening" software to monitor and analyze conversations near your phone. But what does this mean for our privacy? And how can we protect ourselves from this invasive technology?

Share your thoughts

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Cox Media Group admits using your phone to listen to conversations: Report​


Your long-held suspicions are confirmed, according to a report: Your phone really is listening to you.
A marketing firm whose clients include Facebook and Google has privately admitted that it listens to users’ smartphone microphones and then places ads based on the information that is picked up, according to 404 Media.

Cox Media Group, the television and radio news conglomerate, admitted in a pitch deck to investors that its “Active Listening” software uses artificial intelligence to “capture real-time intent data by listening to our conversations,” according to the report.

"Advertisers can pair this voice-data with behavioral data to target in-market consumers,” the company wrote in the pitch deck.

CMG noted in the deck that consumers “leave a data trail based on their conversations and online behavior” and that the AI-powered software collects and analyzes said “behavioral and voice data from 470+ sources.”

The slideshow includes claims that Facebook, Google and Amazon are clients of CMG.

Google removed CMG from its “Partners Program” website after it was contacted by 404 Media to comment on the matter.

“All advertisers must comply with all applicable laws and regulations as well as our Google Ads policies, and when we identify ads or advertisers that violate these policies, we will take appropriate action,” a Google spokesperson told The Post.

Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, admitted that it was reviewing CMG to see whether it violated any of its terms of service.

“Meta does not use your phone’s microphone for ads and we’ve been public about this for years,” a Meta spokesperson told The Post.

“We are reaching out to CMG to get them to clarify that their program is not based on Meta data.”

An Amazon spokesperson told 404 Media that its advertising arm “has never worked with CMG on this program and has no plans to do so.”

The company said that it would take action against any partner that violates its rules.

Last December, MindSift, a New Hampshire-based company, bragged that it used voice data to place targeted ads by listening to people’s everyday conversations through microphones on their devices, according to 404 Media.

The report revealed the existence of CMG’s “Active Listening” feature.

“We know what you’re thinking. Is this even legal?” the company wrote in a since-deleted Cox blog post from November 2023.

“It is legal for phones and devices to listen to you. When a new app download or update prompts consumers with a multi-page term of use agreement somewhere in the fine print, Active Listening is often included.”

People always had this apprehension, apps like Facebook etc are pawn of American establishment too. The recent assassination of Ismail Haniyeh was also alleged to be result of WhatsApp tracing
 
People always had this apprehension, apps like Facebook etc are pawn of American establishment too. The recent assassination of Ismail Haniyeh was also alleged to be result of WhatsApp tracing
but problem is that we are the one who give access to certain applications to get access.
 
It is not an expose. If you read the terms and conditions of WhatsApp, it is very clear they can snoop in on your chats for advertising data!
 
Just some clickbait news article.

It can not occur unless you gave permissions. Or, if you are using a custom rom with rooting [well.... you should know the risk when you flash custom roms).
 
It is pretty common these days and unless we give permission to every app, this kind of things are not meant to happen. but yeah, nowadays, every app requires certain permission so we are bound.
 
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