from-nibly 14 hours ago

Is this news anymore?

Here's a title you can reuse freely for the next decade or so.

(Startup/public/private equity owned) company <IOT device>'s collect data you don't want them collecting, use it for profit to your detriment, and didn't bother securing any of it because they don't care.

  • dylan604 12 hours ago

    Each time it happens, it needs to be news to name and shame the companies. Unfortunately, once you've bought the product, it's game over for privacy. So this info needs to be explicitly available for each product/company so that when future buyers are researching, they might be able to stumble upon these articles.

    Product reviewers need to explicitly state that the cameras/mics/whatevs of devices have been used for nefarious purposes other than what is advertised on the box.

    But we should not just sweep everything under the rug because a couple of nerds "knows about it" because there's a heck of a lot more people that do not.

    • llm_trw 10 hours ago

      Name and shame doesn't work. What does work is prison terms for ceos.

      • survirtual 6 hours ago

        *Prison terms for the board of directors.

        In the event of incidents that result in mass deaths (oil spills, etc), tried as if mass murderers for the board.

        CEOs are too often just scapegoats for the evils of a board.

        • llm_trw 6 hours ago

          I mean I've seen it go both ways, but sure, the board should know what the ceo is doing and vice versa.

      • dylan604 3 hours ago

        Name and shame doesn't work in that it doesn't stop the next guy, or even the current guy. It does at least make the information available to those that care. If you don't care, great. Continue to live with your head in the sand. If you do care, at least the information is available for you to make an informed decision.

        If we do nothing because of the "it doesn't work" in a manner you think fitting, then we'll make no progress. It's yet another example of a choice between doing anything versus doing nothing because the perfect answer isn't available.

      • hulitu 7 hours ago

        > What does work is prison terms for ceos.

        Could work. But, unfortunately those CEOs make the law.

    • hulitu 7 hours ago

      > Each time it happens, it needs to be news to name and shame the companies.

      Was this ever a problem for Microsoft, Google or Apple ? /s

      • dylan604 2 hours ago

        I do not use Microsoft products. I do not use Google products in my personal life. Others do not use Apple products. So for some people, it absolutely does work. I don't shop at WalMart, and am damn near Amazon free too.

        A new sucker is born every minute. If the only time the name and shame is mentioned is when it happens, then those new borns will potentially never hear about it.

        Why do they preach to the choir? Because that's how you get them to sing.

lifeisstillgood 9 hours ago

Oh the interesting part is “our AI could not interpret images of common objects at unusual angles”.

Now that’s fascinating - why not? Is computer vision just boring pattern recognition and really does not have “concepts” underlying it - if so 90% of the AI hype is false?

There must be several phds in that at least :-)

  • WithinReason 6 hours ago

    There are cases where AI can recognise gender on an X-ray when humans can't, find tumors that experienced doctor's can't. This must mean that human doctors looking at Xrays use just boring pattern recognition and AI has actual concepts of what it's seeing.

    • lifeisstillgood 4 hours ago

      But does it really? Or is it more observant than a human doctor and more thorough, but only at the limited task of deciding if this X-ray looks like the million other X-rays of a male abdomen versus the million X-rays of a female abdomen.

      I assume counting the number of ribs is not what is meant …

    • johnisgood 4 hours ago

      That is actually pretty cool, but I believe you meant to say "biological sex" instead of "gender". :P

      I have no clue how an AI may find the gender (which is in the mind) of someone through x-rays alone.

      • WithinReason 4 hours ago

        the mathematical correlation between the two is so high as to be negligible

        • johnisgood 4 hours ago

          What does this mean? I do not think anyone could determine my gender based on x-rays alone. My biological sex, however, definitely.

          • WithinReason 2 hours ago

            It's simple math. If the correlation between gender and sex is 0.99 then if a method can determine your sex with say a 90% accuracy then it can determine your gender with an 89% accuracy (very roughly). The difference is negligible.

  • lewhoo 8 hours ago

    What ? Stable diffusion doesn't have an underlying understanding that humans typically have two arms, two hands and five fingers per hand gathered from vast sea of training data ? That's a bold statement.

    • lifeisstillgood 7 hours ago

      I think the issue is “understanding”

      IIRR it’s a debate as to the difference between 99% of the time It predicts the next pixel will be fleshy and the pixel next to it is background this making something that looks fingery (and so when presented with An odd angle that 99% drops crazily” or that somehow there is a executive function that has evolved that gets a concept of finger with movement, musculature etc

      It’s the “somehow evolved” part that is where I have my concerns.

      Predictive ability based on billions images, sounds good. Executive function - how does that work? But at some point we are playing “what is consciousness” games.

      Would love to hear more rigourous thought than mine - any links gratefully received:-)

      • lewhoo 7 hours ago

        I actually agree with you. I was a bit sarcastic. If I understand correctly there isn't a fundamental difference when it comes to text output vs pixel data output in this context. If so then it suddenly sounds much more of a stretch (intuitively) to claim that somehow stable diffusion understands the real world (like people claim to be the case with language models).

    • kbrkbr 7 hours ago

      > and five fingers per hand

      In my experience it's more like three to six. But your argument's still valid. There is a concept

thurnderbong 7 hours ago

Tech progress at its finest. I stick to my 90s-made fridge, samey vintage washing machine, non-smart vacuum and non-smart microwave. All solved and sturdy appliances. Cheers.

  • lofaszvanitt 4 hours ago

    But, it's not power efficient. You want a great uppercase letter closer to the beginning of ABC :D.

kleiba 6 hours ago

And what repercussions does a company like that have to fear? None.

Legislation worldwide needs to catch up with tech badly.

  • krick 2 hours ago

    Is it really completely legal? That would surprise me. And, of course, is it is, it shouldn't be.

    I mean, in the end, it's just how you frame it, so it surely must be a viable class action lawsuit. When a teenager playfully hacks into someone's completely unprotected IoT anyone could walk into, he is breaking the law for some reason. When your business is not doing anything "wrong", but it provides a technical service targeted to businesses who actually produce malware and do harmful stuff like that, you can end up in prison for a lifetime. So surely there must be a way to frame this kind of thing as criminal activity too.

  • johnisgood 4 hours ago

    This has been an on-going issue for decades, I believe. Will this ever happen? Do people in control want it to happen?

air7 9 hours ago

Just to clarify: The photos and audio collection isn't related to the mentioned security flaws. These are two separate issues.

> Ecovacs robot vacuums, which have been found to suffer from critical cybersecurity flaws... > An Ecovacs spokesperson confirmed the company uses the data collected as part of its product improvement program to train its AI models.

WithinReason 6 hours ago

I have one, it comes with a sticker over the camera. I just left it on.

the_gorilla 11 hours ago

At least I know I'm right to avoid anything with a camera on it. You're not crazy if they're after you. I also try to avoid chinese products, but we all know that's not completely possible anymore.