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    Home » This Jammer Wants to Block Always-Listening AI Wearables. It Probably Won’t Work
    Tech

    This Jammer Wants to Block Always-Listening AI Wearables. It Probably Won’t Work

    Savannah HeraldBy Savannah HeraldMarch 6, 20263 Mins Read
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    This Jammer Wants to Block Always-Listening AI Wearables. It Probably Won’t Work
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    Tomorrow’s Tech, Today: Innovation That Moves Us Forward

    Key takeaways
    • Spectre's effectiveness remains unproven; shared videos do little to demonstrate reliable microphone identification or consistent jamming.
    • Baradari acknowledges the product is early stage and says more testing and integration of ideas are underway to address critiques.
    • Ultrasonic jamming raises safety concerns; limited research means humans and many pets might experience pain or severe annoyance.
    • Virality shows appetite for privacy; experts at Citizen Lab and Electronic Frontier Foundation urge device-level controls and regulation.

    Deveillance also claims the Spectre can find nearby microphones by detecting radio frequencies (RF), but critics say finding a microphone via RF emissions is not effective unless the sensor is immediately beside it.

    “If you could detect and recognize components via RF the way Spectre claims to, it would literally be transformative to technology,” Jordan wrote in a text to WIRED after he built a device to test detecting RF signatures in microphones. “You’d be able to do radio astronomy in Manhattan.”

    Deveillance is also looking at ways to integrate nonlinear junction detection (NLJD), a very high-frequency radio signal used by security professionals to find hidden mics and bugs. NLJD detectors are expensive and used primarily in professional contexts like military operations.

    Even if a device could detect a microphone’s exact location, objects around a room can change how the frequencies spread and interact. The emitted frequencies could also be a problem. There haven’t been adequate studies to show what effects ultrasonic frequencies have on the human ear, but some people and many pets can hear them and find them obnoxious or even painful. Baradari acknowledges that her team needs to do more testing to see how pets are affected.

    “They simply cannot do this,” engineer and YouTuber Dave Jones (who runs the channel EEVblog) wrote in an email to WIRED. “They are using the classic trick of using wording to imply that it will detect every type of microphone, when all they are probably doing is scanning for Bluetooth audio devices. It’s totally lame.” Baradari reiterates that the Spectre uses a combination of RF and Bluetooth low energy to detect microphones.

    WIRED asked Baradari to share any evidence of the Spectre’s effectiveness at identifying and blocking microphones in a person’s vicinity. Baradari shared a few short videoclips of people putting their phones to their ears listening to audioclips—which were presumably jammed by the Spectre—but these videos do little to prove that the device works.

    Future Imperfect

    Baradari has taken the critiques in stride, acknowledging that the tech is still in development. “I actually appreciate those comments, because they’re making me think and see more things as well,” Baradari says. “I do believe that with the ideas that we’re having and integrating into one device, these concerns can be addressed.”

    People were quick to poke fun at the Spectre I online, calling the technology the cone of silence from Dune. Now, the Deveillance website reads, “Our goal is to make the cone of silence become reality.”

    John Scott-Railton, a cybersecurity researcher at Citizen Lab, who is critical of the Spectre I, lauded the device’s virality as an indication of the real hunger for these kinds of gadgets to win back our privacy.

    “The silver lining of this blowing up is that it is a Ring-like moment that highlights how quickly and intensely consumer attitudes have shifted around pervasive recording devices,” says Scott-Railton. “We need to be building products that do all the cool things that people want but that don’t have the massive privacy- and consent-violation undertow. You need device-level controls, and you need regulations of the companies that are doing this.”

    Cooper Quintin, a senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, echoed those sentiments, even if critics believe Deveillance’s efforts to be flawed.

    “If this technology works, it could be a boon for many,” Quintin wrote in an email to WIRED. “It is nice to see a company creating something to protect privacy instead of working on new and creative ways to extract data from us.”

    Read the full article on the original site


    AI and Machine Learning artificial intelligence audio Black Technologists Cybersecurity News Digital Innovation Emerging Technologies Future of Work Gadget Reviews Innovation in Education Minorities in Tech noise-canceling Privacy Silicon Valley Updates Smart Devices Software Development Startup News STEM News surveillance Tech Culture Tech Equity Tech for Good Tech Industry Updates Tech Trends Technology News wearables
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