The New York Times International - 27.08.2019

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6 | TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES INTERNATIONAL EDITION


tech


Many of us ask the digital companions
in our homes, whether Amazon’s
Alexa, Apple’s Siri or Google Assistant,
to handle innocuous tasks like setting a
timer and playing music.
What most of us may not realize is
that in some instances, there might be
a person listening in, too.
In two separate reports in The
Guardian and Bloomberg News, whis-
tle-blowers recently said they had
listened in on Siri recordings and
Alexa activations that inadvertently
recorded couples having sex and crimi-
nals making drug deals. Another publi-
cation, VRT, chronicled how a Google
subcontractor had shared more than
1,000 excerpts from Google recordings,
which journalists then used to identify
some individuals.
In the tech industry, it’s an open
secret that artificial intelligence isn’t
all that smart yet. It takes lots of peo-
ple manually sifting through data to
train the computing systems. That
means humans occasionally cull
through voice recordings to train
Alexa, Siri and Google to understand
the nuances of speech, such as distin-
guishing spoken words like “Austin”
from “Boston,” or “U2” from
“YouTube.”
But tech companies have been
opaque in disclosing these practices to
us. And they may also have over-
reached in the types of recordings that
they gather.
Google, Apple and Amazon have
publicly said that fewer than 1 percent
of recordings were subject to human
review.
Apple and Google also said that they
had suspended their human review
programs, while Amazon expanded its
Alexa assistant to include a suite of
privacy controls.
That got me wondering: What can
we do to protect our privacy with these
smart assistants, short of chucking
them into the recycling bin?
The good news is that there are
steps we can take. Amazon and Google
offer the ability to disable human
vetting for their virtual assistants.
Apple has said it plans to release a
software update that will let people opt
in to its program, which involves hu-
mans grading Siri samples for quality
control, rather than being part of the
program by default.
And there are other things we can
do, such as deleting recordings and
turning off sensors, to minimize shar-


ing with the companies.
Here’s a comprehensive guide on
what to do to protect your privacy with
each of the virtual assistants.

HOW TO CURTAIL SHARING BY ALEXA
Among smart assistants, Alexa has the
most comprehensive and straightfor-

ward set of privacy controls. Amazon
recently released the Alexa privacy
hub, which has a thorough explanation
of the types of data collected by the
virtual assistant and how to change its
privacy settings.

HERE’S HOW TO OPT OUT OF HUMAN VETTING:


  • Open the Alexa app on your smart-
    phone and tap Settingsand then select
    Alexa Privacy.

  • Tap Manage How Your Data Im-
    proves Alexa.

  • For the control that says Help Im-
    prove Amazon Services and Develop
    New Features,toggle the switch to the
    offposition.


HOW TO DELETE VOICE RECORDINGS:


  • In the same Alexa Privacymenu,
    select Review Voice History.

  • In date range, select the time frame of
    recordings you want to delete, such as
    All History.

  • Tap Delete All Recordings for All
    History.


OTHER PRECAUTIONS:


  • Alexa devices include a physical
    button to disable their microphones.
    Hit the kill switchwhenever you are
    having sensitive conversations. The
    device will illuminate with a red light
    to indicate that the microphone is off.

  • Some Alexa devices, like the Echo
    Spot alarm clock, have a built-in cam-
    era.
    The easiest way to disable it is to


say, “Alexa, turn the camera off.”
If you still feel uncomfortable with
the camera, consider buying a cheap
webcam cover that can slide over the
lens.
Amazon said in a statement that it
takes customer privacy seriously. “We
continuously review our practices and
procedures to ensure we’re providing
customers with the best experiences
and privacy choices,” the company
said.

DELETING SIRI RECORDINGS
Siri is the most lacking in privacy
controls among the virtual assistants,
and the process to manage user data is
the least straightforward.
For example, Apple does not offer an
option to let people opt in to its so-
called grading program, though it has
said it plans to do so in a future soft-
ware update.
There is no ability to review Siri
recordings.
Siri does take some steps to mask
your identity.
When you make requests with an
iPhone, for example, the device associ-
ates those with a random identifier

instead of your Apple account ID,
according to the company. To reset that
random identifier, you can turn off Siri
and then turn it back on.
Disabling Siri will also delete your
data associated with it, including re-
cordings.

DISABLING SIRI TO ERASE YOUR DATA:


  • Open the Settingsapp, then tap Gen-
    eral, thenKeyboards. In the Enable
    Dictation control, switch it to the off
    position.

  • Return to the Settingsapp. Select Siri
    & Search. Then disable the switches
    for Listen for “Hey Siri”and Press
    Side Button for Siri. You will then see a
    message asking if you want to disable
    Siri, which will remove your data from
    Apple’s servers. Tap Turn Off Siriand
    your Siri history will be deleted.

  • To re-enable Siri, go back to each of
    those settings and turn them back on.
    Some of the sensitive recordings
    uploaded to Siri appeared to have
    come from unintentional activations.
    This can happen, for instance, as
    when the crown of the Apple Watch is
    pressed down by accident, which sum-
    mons the assistant.


A PRECAUTION WITH AN APPLE WATCH:


  • To prevent the watch crown from
    triggering Siri, disable the Siri side
    button on the iPhone. In the Settings
    app, tap on Siri & Search, then toggle
    off Press Side Button for Siri. This will
    simultaneously disable the shortcut on
    the watch.
    Apple declined to comment beyond
    an earlier statement announcing the
    suspension of its Siri-grading program.


PRIVACY ON GOOGLE HOME
Google offers some controls for tweak-
ing privacy settings for Google Assist-
ant on Android phones and Google
Home smart speakers, among other
products.
While Google’s human review pro-
gram is suspended, you can still make
sure you’re not a part of it by opting
out.
The search company also lets you
automatically delete Google Assistant
requests made after a period of time.

HERE’S HOW TO DISABLE HUMAN REVIEWS:


  • Visit Google’s web tool called Activity
    controls.

  • Scroll down to Voice & Audio Activity.
    Toggle this switch off.


AUTOMATICALLY DELETING RECORDINGS:


  • Again, visit Google’s Activity controls
    web tool.

  • Under Web & App Activity, click
    Manage Activity.

  • Click Choose to Delete Automatically.
    Then click Keep for 3 months then
    delete automatically.
    A Google spokesman declined to
    comment and referred to a blog post,
    in which the company described its
    process of working with human lan-
    guage reviewers to improve speech
    recognition.


Hey Siri, quit spying on me


Brian X. Chen


TECH FIX


GLENN HARVEY


Digital aids like the Amazon Echo may be recording you when you use them. But there
are steps you can take to protect your privacy.

AMAZON


If you go shopping for a television today,
virtually everything in the store will be a
4K TV. Only some, however, have an in-
creasingly popular feature called High
Dynamic Range, or H.D.R. This little ac-
ronym can make your favorite shows
look sharper and more vibrant and it
might just be worth spending a little ex-
tra on your next television.
High Dynamic Range actually refers
to a collection of traits that lead to a bet-
ter overall image. On televisions that
support H.D.R., bright parts of an image
will appear brighter than before, while
dark parts of an image will be darker
than on older televisions. This gives TV
shows and movies better contrast and
can make some scenes feel more real.
H.D.R. also expands the range of colors
your television can display beyond what
you’re used to seeing on previous gener-
ations of televisions.
All this adds up to a meaningful up-
grade, if your television and the TV
shows and movies you watch support it.


HOW H.D.R. WORKS
Your television can display only a small
fraction of the colors your eyes can see.
Each pixel on your screen contains a
tiny red, green and blue light. These
lights can shine up to 256 different
shades of each color. Combined, every
pixel can display up to about 16 million
colors. That’s more than enough to paint
a picture, but H.D.R. screens can do a lot
better.
On a basic H.D.R. TV, each light can
shine up to 1,024 shades of red, green or
blue. This means every pixel can display
over a billion individual colors. This ex-
pands what’s known as the “color gam-
ut,” or the range of possible colors your
television can reproduce. You might also
hear this part of H.D.R. referred to as
“wide color gamut” or “wide color
space” in stores. Not only does it mean
that it can produce more vivid versions
of individual colors, but it can display
finer detail on shades in between. This
means shots of things like forests or


sand, which can often have subtle
shades of similar colors, appear much
more vibrant and detailed than they
would have on previous TVs.
In addition to expanding the color
gamut, H.D.R. TVs can also display
brighter brights and darker darks. What
your brain normally interprets as
“black” on a TV screen is more accu-
rately some shade of gray. Depending on
the kind of television you have, this
could be a very light gray, which means
bright colors don’t stand out as much.
By lowering the black level, and letting
your television emit more light, H.D.R.
makes it possible to display much richer
pictures.
H.D.R. doesn’t set a specific standard
for how dark or bright the television it-
self must be capable of. Instead, it de-
fines what range a TV has to meet in or-
der to be described as “H.D.R.” The
UHD Alliance uses a rainbow-twist Ul-
tra HD Premium label, for example, as a
way to signal that a given television is
capable of a specific peak brightness
and black level that’s far above what
regular HD sets are capable of. This
means that a television with that label
has the necessary specs required to
make H.D.R. content look good. Some
TVs may have an even wider range of
levels and thus look better, but this sets a
baseline.

TWO COMPETING STANDARDS
Further complicating your shopping
trip is the fact that there are two very
different versions of High Dynamic
Range. Both provide the benefits de-
scribed above, but one is better — and
more costly — than the other. The first,
HDR10, is an open standard that is free
for manufacturers to include in their
sets, and predictably, is in the majority
of televisions that support H.D.R. Dolby
Vision, on the other hand, provides even
more colors and better bright/dark lev-
els, but Dolby charges manufacturers a
fee to use it. This means that Dolby Vi-
sion-compatible TVs are likely more ex-
pensive than other H.D.R. TVs.
There’s nothing stopping manufac-
turers from including both HDR10 and
Dolby Vision in a single set (aside from
cost), so some may even support both.
HDR10 supports 10-bit color, which gets
you that huge billion-color gamut dis-
cussed earlier. It also sets a baseline

brightness level that’s higher than you’ll
usually see on a non-H.D.R. set.
Dolby Vision, on the other hand, sup-
ports 12-bit color for a whopping 68 bil-
lion possible colors. The Dolby spec also
allows for televisions that support up to
10 times the brightness levels of even
baseline HDR10 sets, and can even ad-
just brightness levels on the fly during a
movie or show. But in practice most tele-
visions don’t reach that upper limit. In
other words, it will be a long time before
you can buy a TV that pushes the limit of
what Dolby Vision can do.
Dolby Vision offers some advantages
over HDR10, but here’s the kicker: The
TV shows and movies you watch have to
specifically support Dolby Vision, not
just generic H.D.R. However, since com-
paratively few televisions can support
this — and Dolby Vision-compatible TVs

tend to be more expensive — many pro-
ductions optimize for the basic HDR
standard instead. That means, for now
at least, you’re spending more money on
a better television even though there’s
less content that makes use of it.

COMPATIBILITY OF CONTENT
Your fancy new High Dynamic Range
television won’t mean much if the TV
shows and movies you watch still look
like the old stuff you’re used to watch-
ing. In 2019, there’s more H.D.R. content
available than ever.
Netflix has a wide collection of shows
that stream in H.D.R., including
“Stranger Things” and “Glow.” And Am-
azon has its own shows and movies, like
“The Grand Tour,” all streaming in 4K
H.D.R. You can also rent or buy sup-
ported movies from iTunes or Vudu and

stream them to your television.
The 4K H.D.R. content will require a
fairly high-speed internet connection
(25 Mbps or higher according to Net-
flix’s help documents), although
streaming content can compress the
quality compared to playing it from a
disc.
While Netflix, Amazon and Vudu
charge more for 4K content, that up-
grade includes H.D.R. Apple, on the
other hand, doesn’t charge extra for a 4K
upgrade on its movie rentals at all.
When it comes to broadcast TV, there
are a few options available. However,
your television will need to support a
slightly different H.D.R. standard called
H.L.G. It’s common for TVs that support
HDR10 to also support H.L.G., but
there’s not as much H.D.R. content com-
ing in.

4K Blu-ray players offer the best op-
tion, as these don’t need to stream over
the internet. If you want to watch H.D.R.
content, you’ll need a compatible Blu-
ray player, as well as 4K H.D.R. versions
of any movies you buy. 4K discs can be a
bit more expensive than a standard HD
Blu-ray, and not all of them will fully sup-
port Dolby Vision, but most of them sup-
port some form of H.D.R. and when you
upgrade to 4K, H.D.R. almost always
comes with it.
Finally, there are H.D.R.-compatible
games. If you have a PS4 Pro or an Xbox
One X (the latter of which is also a 4K
H.D.R.-compatible Blu-ray player), then
some games can make use of H.D.R. on
your television. The list of compatible
games for each console grows every
year.

ADDING MORE PIXELS
Eventually, High Dynamic Range will
probably be available on just about ev-
ery television you can buy. For now, you
can buy a 4K TV without it, but you
might not want to skip it. Upgrading to a
4K TV adds more pixels. Depending on
how close you sit to your TV, you might
not even be able to tell the difference.
H.D.R., however, changes what those
pixels can display, and adds a much
wider range of colors and better bright-
ness levels than you had before. Up-
grading to 4K can be a costly endeavor,
requiring a new television, Blu-ray play-
er or game console, but H.D.R. is an
even better stealth upgrade that comes
along for the ride.
Outside of the television itself, H.D.R.
doesn’t cost anything extra once you’re
in the 4K world.
If you want to have the option for the
best possible version of a show or movie,
then a Dolby Vision TV is your best,
most expensive bet. Fortunately, most
Dolby Vision TVs also support HDR
so you won’t miss out on anything. If
you’re O.K. with just basic H.D.R. —
which is still a much better picture than
you’re used to — then you can stick with
HDR10.
Whichever direction you choose to go,
though, if you’re planning to buy a new
4K TV and you care about picture qual-
ity at all, High Dynamic Range will do
even more for you than 4K alone would.
Even if you have to spend a little extra
money for it.

Why it’s worth considering H.D.R. on your next TV


Televisions with High Dynamic Range make bright parts of the image seem brighter, and the dark sections seem darker.

GRZEGORZ CZAPSKI/ALAMY, VIA SHUTTERSTOCK


Term refers to collection


of features that combine


for a more vibrant image


BY ERIC RAVENSCRAFT

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