Owners of the Amazon Echohave long had the option for the device to process requests locally, thereby keeping their information off of Amazon’s servers. That functionality is going away starting on March 28.
The company sent out emailsto customers to explain the changes.
"We are reaching out to let you know that the Alexa feature ‘Do Not Send Voice Recordings’ that you enabled on your supported Echo device(s) will no longer be available beginning March 28, 2025," the email reads. "As we continue to expand Alexa’s capabilities with generative AI features that rely on the processing power of Amazon’s secure cloud, we have decided to no longer support this feature."
SEE ALSO: Amazon's AI-powered Alexa+ is real and it's coming this yearPer Ars Technica, the changes don’t stop there. Users who have the "Don’t save recordings" feature enabled will also lose access to Voice ID, a feature that allows Alexa to share user-specific things like calendar events, music preferences, and more. Thus, in order to keep that functionality, users will have to manually change that setting as well.
In short, everything you say to your Echo devices after March 28 will be sent to Amazon’s cloud, and there isn’t anything anyone can do about it. If users continue to make Amazon delete recordings, they will also lose access to features their devices had by default when they were purchased.
Amazon attempts to assuage security concerns by telling users in the email that "Alexa voice requests are always encrypted in transit to Amazon’s secure cloud, which was designed with layers of security protections to keep customer information safe."
However, as Ars points out, once the information gets there, it’ll be used by Amazon and its employees to do as they please.
The announcement has not gone over well, with many Alexa users stormingRedditover the weekend to voice their displeasure.
The news comes a couple of weeks after Amazon’s announcement of Alexa+, a subscription service that adds AI enhancements. The retail giant had delayed the release of Alexa+due to a severe setback, but it seems to be on pace to release the service this year. Amazon says Alexa+ will offer a more seamless and context-aware experience and also work with other Alexa-enabled devices like Ring video doorbells and other tech.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Your Amazon Echo will start reporting to Amazon on March 28-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
2
浏览
665
获赞
13
These coronavirus trackers can help you sort through the info overload
If you're like me, the daily barrage of information about the progress of the coronavirus pandemic cInstagram Lite keeps all the key features in a 2MB package
Instagram is about to become less of a burden for your phone and your data plan. On Wednesday, InstaTesla and Toyota dominate as 'Green Choices' on Consumer Reports' top car list
Consumer Reports' annual Top 10 car and truck picks came out Thursday and many electric and hybrid c‘White Lotus’ fan theories: The online experience is the real fun of the HBO show
When I watch White Lotus, I really watch. Eyes on the TV, phone down, my oft-fleeting attention poinUber Boat takes over London commuter ferry for water rides
UPDATE: Aug. 3, 2020, 10:03 a.m. BST Uber Boat has launched in London, setting sail on the River ThaSay your goodbyes to Internet Explorer
Microsoft is putting Internet Explorer (mostly) out of its misery in 2022, when the company ends maiTikTok launches new music discovery hub
TikTok makes another bid to dictate the songs you have on repeat. Today (May 12), TikTok announced iApple says HomePod and HomePod mini will get lossless audio support in the future
Apple's recently announced lossless audio feature on Apple Music was followed by a cold shower: ApplSnapchat removes Juneteenth filter that prompted users to smile to break chains
Snapchat apologized for its insensitive Juneteenth filter that asked users to smile to break chainsElon Musk made a song about NFTs, and he's selling it as an NFT
Elon Musk, Technoking of Tesla, EDM music producer, lover of Doge, fashionista, and prankster, is maDiscord blocks iOS users from NSFW servers, blames Apple
Discord just put Apple customers at the kids' table. The group chat service quietly announced TuesdaLooking for tax advice on TikTok? Beware of #TaxTok recommendations.
Tax season sucks. Lots of us — and this includes me — need a little help getting our taxGood news everyone, Logan Paul doesn't actually think the Earth is flat
Logan Paul is many things, but thankfully he is not a flat Earther. In a 50-minute, 2-second mockumeBest deals of the day Jan. 30: 5th
We've rounded up the best deals we could find on Jan. 30 —here are some of our top picks:BESTWhy is TikTok so hot for Matty Healy?
"Matty Healy is a community resource." That's how my friend Mel (her name changed to protect her dig