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20th February 2019 18:53
Link to Post #1
New Surveillance and Personal Security issue (cameras on planes)
Like the article below I guess they think we're that stupid
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Airplane seat cameras could be your new spy in the sky
Commentary: A camera trained on you for an entire long-haul flight? Surely you
can't be serious...
by
Claire Reilly
February 19, 2019 3:06 AM PST
https://www.cnet.com/news/airplane-s...spy-in-the-sky
/
If Elon Musk is to be believed, the future of air travel involves superfast
flights on Big F--king Rockets, taking us from London to Tokyo in 37 minutes of
chrome-clad comfort.
But we are disgusting monsters and that is not the future we deserve.
In our timeline, the aircraft of the future will be a flying nightmare tube,
full of belching human meat sacks crammed cheek by jowl into rows of seats that
record our every movement.
At least that's the future that one Singapore Airlines passenger uncovered this
week.
Twitter user Vitaly Kamluk shared a photo of what looked like a camera installed
directly beneath the inflight entertainment screen on a Singapore Airlines
aircraft.
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Singapore Airlines replied that it was indeed a camera, embedded into the seat
back by the original equipment manufacturers of the plane, but said the cameras
had been disabled on its aircraft and "there are no plans to develop any
features" using them.
And I think we can all agree, if a camera is built into a device, it will always
remain unused, always remain secure, and will never be used to capture footage.
Which is lucky because next time I'm flying the 23 hours it takes to get from
Sydney to literally anywhere, I want to rest assured that my metal hotbox of an
airplane isn't recording my dumb face as I horf down questionable casserole,
snore my way through three Mission Impossible films and then quietly sweat
through the incubation period of that particularly virulent strain of gastro I
picked up on my last Tokyo stopover.
Ever since the jet engine revolutionised flying in the '60s, we've been sold an
image of air travel as a high-flying world of luxury and dewy-faced women in
pearls and twinsets staring wistfully out windows.
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But the reality is anything but. It's all pre-teens opening plastic packets of
candy to work noisily around their retainer-clad maws. It's mouth-breathers
hoiking their shoeless feet onto tray tables, wide-set passengers manspreading
into your leg space, the smell of reheated stew served from a drum, the uneasy
detente that follows 12 solid hours of silent fighting over an armrest.
And oh, the vomiting. The last time I took an international flight, the girl in
the row opposite me hurled within 20 minutes of take-off. Her poor mother
quietly wiped hot sick off her inflight entertainment screen, perhaps wondering
why she wasn't on some better flight to meet a fellow named Armando in Aruba.
sd-air-and-space-museum-2-of-51
Feast on so much aviation history at the San Diego Air and Space Museum
48 Photos
If the airlines of the future want to capture this kind of footage -- no doubt
after pulling some sort of "sorry, not sorry" when they eventually do activate
the cameras -- then have at it.
But you can bet that the "original equipment manufacturers" who installed these
cameras weren't trying to meet a growing demand for seat-cam footage of tired
plane passengers. We aren't livestreamed entertainment in this grim, dystopian
future: We are an audience to be marketed to, data to be mined and a captive set
of eyeballs to be coerced.
Will the cabin crew be taking notes about whether seat 64B is watching the
safety demonstration? Will the cameras track our gaze to see if we're watching
in-flight commercials? And what happens if we turn away?
Cameras are in our advertising billboards, in our smart home devices and on
every second street corner, tracking our movements and slowly building up a
picture of our lives in minute-by-minute real time. Add airplanes to the mix and
you have a terrifying new way to calculate your social credit score. What
happens on the way to Vegas doesn't stay in the air.
Air travel is changing. But it's going to be damn hard to replace visions of
Frank Sinatra singing "Come Fly With Me" with a 24-hour live stream of screaming
children hurling box casserole into their seat-back camera.
Singapore Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Last edited by ramus; 20th February 2019 at 18:59.
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The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to ramus For This Post:
cursichella1 (21st February 2019), Denise/Dizi (20th February 2019), Inversion (27th February 2019), petra (21st February 2019), Sadieblue (21st February 2019), toppy (21st February 2019), Valerie Villars (20th February 2019)
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20th February 2019 18:57
Link to Post #2
Re: New Surveillance and Personal Security issue (cameras on planes)
If you believe this we need to talk, because I have some ocean front property in Arizona. I guess they think we're that stupid.
I worked in manufacturing for 30 years, they would not spend an extra dime on a part that they weren't going to use.
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Google says the built-in microphone it never told Nest users about was 'never supposed to be a secret'
https://www.businessinsider.com/nest...-secret-2019-2
In early February, Google announced that Assistant would work with its home
security and alarm system, Nest Secure.
The problem: Users didn't know a microphone existed on their Nest security
devices to begin with.
On Tuesday, a Google representative told Business Insider the company had
made an "error."
"The on-device microphone was never intended to be a secret and should have
been listed in the tech specs," the person said. "That was an error on our
part."
In early February, Google announced that its home security and alarm system Nest
Secure would be getting an update. Users, the company said, could now enable its
virtual-assistant technology, Google Assistant.
The problem: Nest users didn't know a microphone existed on their security
device to begin with.
The existence of a microphone on the Nest Guard, which is the alarm, keypad, and
motion-sensor component in the Nest Secure offering, was never disclosed in any
of the product material for the device.
On Tuesday, a Google representative told Business Insider the company had made
an "error."
"The on-device microphone was never intended to be a secret and should have been
listed in the tech specs," the person said. "That was an error on our part."
Nest Guard
Google says "the microphone has never been on and is only activated when users
specifically enable the option."
Read more: Google is reabsorbing Nest, the smart-home company it bought for $3.2
billion in 2014
It also said the microphone was originally included in the Nest Guard for the
possibility of adding new security features down the line, like the ability to
detect broken glass.
Still, even if Google included the microphone in its Nest Guard device for
future updates — like its Assistant integration — the news comes as consumers
have grown increasingly wary of major tech companies and their commitment to
consumer privacy.
For Google, the revelation is particularly problematic and brings to mind
previous privacy controversies, such as the 2010 incident in which the company
acknowledged that its fleet of Street View cars "accidentally" collected
personal data transmitted over consumers' unsecured WiFi networks, including
emails.
Google bought Nest — which was initially known for its smart thermostat device
— back in 2014 for $3.2 billion. It became a standalone company in 2015 when
Google reorganized as Alphabet, but in February 2018 it was brought back into
Google under the leadership of the head hardware exec Rick Osterloh.
Today, Nest offers a variety of Internet of Things products including smoke
detectors, video doorbells, and security cameras.
Last edited by ramus; 20th February 2019 at 19:07.
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The Following 7 Users Say Thank You to ramus For This Post:
cursichella1 (21st February 2019), Denise/Dizi (20th February 2019), Franny (20th February 2019), Pam (26th February 2019), Sadieblue (21st February 2019), toppy (21st February 2019), Valerie Villars (20th February 2019)
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20th February 2019 19:25
Link to Post #3