Cox deletes ‘Active Listening’ ad pitch after boasting that it eavesdrops though our phones::undefined

  • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The answer is: it wouldn’t. You’re right on the money, you couldn’t do anything other than speculation.

    • BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk
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      6 months ago

      Just spitballing here but you might be able to try and correlate the amount of data sent with how much real life activity there was. Say, have silence for a week around the TV then play recorded speech near it for a week and see if that changes the frequency or size of the data being sent back home. Then do this for random 1/2/3 day periods. If offline text to speech is as crap as I’ve heard then the increased data transfer should stick out pretty clearly.

    • Serinus@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      First, someone would be able to prove that communication is happening. Second, if the keys are stored locally, and the original packets saved, the encryption can be reverse engineered.

      Encryption prevents man in the middle attacks. If you have one of the ends, you can usually get the data. If you have the device that’s doing the encryption of the data, and you have the encrypted data, you can decode the data. It’s just a matter of getting through obfuscation at that point.

      The reason this hasn’t been done yet is that it’s not happening yet. CMG was lying in their advertising.