Millions of Voiceprints Quietly Being Harvested 86
An anonymous reader sends this excerpt from The Guardian:
Businesses and governments around the world increasingly are turning to voice biometrics, or voiceprints, to pay pensions, collect taxes, track criminals and replace passwords. "We sometimes call it the invisible biometric," said Mike Goldgof, an executive at Madrid-based AGNITiO, one of about 10 leading companies in the field. Those companies have helped enter more than 65M voiceprints into corporate and government databases, according to Associated Press interviews with dozens of industry representatives and records requests in the United States, Europe and elsewhere. ... The single largest implementation identified by the AP is in Turkey, where the mobile phone company Turkcell has taken the voice biometric data of some 10 million customers using technology provided by market leader Nuance Communications Inc. But government agencies are catching up.
Stephen Hawking look out. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can see a rapid increase in the customer base of synthetic voice software
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User Identified.
Welcome, Stephen Hawking.
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Societies evolve (I can't think of one of any size that was ever 'set up' in some particular way) and they evolve in different directions and have many, many actors in that evolution. That means they cannot have a coherence of thought or purpose or even of mechanisms and social structures.
What you can say is t
Are they collected by hot women (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't mind the young haters. I came to type the same thing. Would that I had karma to give.
please - verify - me
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Always use voices. (Score:4, Funny)
Donald Duck gets customer service satisfaction and no BS.
US Customs (Score:5, Interesting)
I recently returned home from an international trip. I don't travel outside the country very often, and this was my first encounter with the new kiosks that replace the old paper form asking where I went, why I went there, and what I brought home with me.
I was also fairly sure that the reason the Customs agent asked me to look directly at him and state my full name was that he was collecting a voice sample for future use. I think this article confirms that either this is already happening, or will very soon.
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I think this article confirms that either this is already happening, or will very soon.
Well, speaker recognition dates as far back as facial recognition does.
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http://www.signalprocessingsoc... [signalproc...ociety.org]
Re:US Customs (Score:5, Insightful)
It was big in the 1980's to find interesting people using different phones and very early cell phones in South America by the US mil/gov.
The UK enjoyed using it "Spy-in-sky patrols over British cities in hunt for Taliban fighters" (3 August 2008)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new... [dailymail.co.uk]
"They are attempting to identify suspects using ‘voice prints’"
The only real change is the cost of collection, cost of sorting and ability to build on public, telco, private and mil databases been shared with the Five Eye nations and friends.
Expect every arrival chatdown to be recored and indexed with your face, passport and the usual biometrics details.
Expect every car rental, duty free, cafe airport chatdown to be recored and indexed with your face, passport and the usual biometrics details.
Get you talking, keep you talking, its not just about the car rental use or been friendly to the wider travelling public
Domestically the telco and trusted brands Interactive voice response (IVR) will record the rest of the wider populations over years.
That 1 or 5 min chat with Bob or Sally in telco support is not just kept for training purposes or quality control
Your billing details have been matched with something globally unique.
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Re:US Customs (Score:5, Insightful)
With the youtube videos a computer has difficulty determining who is in the video.
At the airport you have to identify yourself. Your name is entered right with the voice data.
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It feels so hackneyed at this point to try to describe the dystopia we are headed toward (already in?)
I dunno, it seems to me that an advanced technology-enabled dystopia is not universal in its spread. Poor third-world countries do not seem to be headed that way. Corruption may have something to do with it, but I'm too tired at the moment to form a logical construct to validate that thought.
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The good news is people now know more and know of the public, private , gov and mil sharing of tech like voice prints and the low cost of huge generational databases.
What was once used to track high ranking Soviet officials in realtime and people of interest in South America is now at home, cheap and for 'legal' domestic use.
With the added features on Inte
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The car itself will probably have powered cell tech. Most new cars today come with them enabled if 'road side assistance' is offered by the vendor. They're enabled whether you buy the service or not.
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Fortunately, they are very easy to permanently disable. At least for now.
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Anarchists? (can't organize, often seem oriented around just opposing everything rather than building anything)
Communists? (never met a real one, just a lot that wrapped other objectives in the flag of communism)
Democrats? (there is a misnomer if ever there was one)
Socialists? (they like big nanny state which is as bad as big surveillance state just different slightly)
Republicans? (long since betrayed republics of all sorts)
Conservatives? (apparently most lean towards the Brown
Over the phone? (Score:4, Informative)
The Vanguard Group Inc, a Pennsylvania-based mutual fund manager, is among the technologyâ(TM)s many financial users. Tens of thousands of customers log in to their accounts by speaking the phrase: âoeAt Vanguard, my voice is my passwordâ into the phone.
The problem with biometrics is that you can't ever replace them if they are stolen.
So naturally they want to use a password that you have to announce publicly. :facepalm:
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If they can be stolen, they are a bit shit as a security token.
And yes, that makes passwords a bit shit as well.
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British banks are distributing retinal scanners. If my mastercard or bank debit card are hacked, I can get a new one. If someone steals my retinal data, I'm pooched in a permanent way. Ditto voiceprints.
Biometric data is never going to be fully secure and thus it borders on pointless as an access control. To use it when its theft would be devastating is a clear sign of insanity.
I'll drop my accounts with any agency or entity that wants to use biometric data as th
so predicted (Score:1)
Advertiser tracking (Score:1)
I've been thinking a lot recently about cortina, Siri and google now. I'm wondering if they've considered using voice searches as the ultimate undeletable cookie.
I've voice searched on my android tablet and shown my elderly parents how to do it on their own tablets and phones to see if they would take to it. But when the iOS google app started pushing me to voice search I said naw to google now. I'm not signed in on iOS. I naively hope that my phone searches are those of a middle aged mature adult while my
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I'm also thinking Facebook might be interested in this for general advertising tracking like the above. They do offer voice calls now. If these companies all share voiceprints it would largely be game over from being tracked.
Except if you're not dumb enough to use any of this stupid garbage, which is useless in the first place.
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I'm also thinking Facebook might be interested in this for general advertising tracking like the above. They do offer voice calls now. If these companies all share voiceprints it would largely be game over from being tracked.
Except if you're not dumb enough to use any of this stupid garbage, which is useless in the first place.
You should see the looks I get when I tell people I specifically do not have a Facebook account. It's like I'm telling them I don't use a telephone.
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If you aren't paying for it, you are the product. Lately, if you are paying for it, you're still the product.
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Yeah. I'm guessing you're a grumpy middle aged male who doesn't see the point of Facebook. Me too.
Well, I am a middle aged male, but I've been privacy-conscious my whole life. My age has nothing to do with it. Plus I'm an introvert.
I mentioned 4 other companies in my comment. Are you dumb enough to use any of them?
Nope.
Quietly? (Score:1)
More like harvested at normal speaking volume
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Yep, all they have to do is install microphones at all public places (along with cameras) and they can now track everyone's position, along with what they are talking.
Uplink (Score:2)
This makes me want to play Uplink again. Good old days of dialing sysadmins' home phones to scrape their voice, then using recordings to authenticate so you can hack the Gibson.
This is going to backfire in an ugly way (Score:4, Insightful)
Then there's the matter of reproducing voiceprints. People have done that for decades for practical jokes, comedy routines, and more. It's not only possible; it has been done already and can readily be done by anybody who puts a little effort into learning how.
Finally, there's the matter of fraud. Combine the two above observations, and your bank can forge your "voice signature" and then play back audio if you can even afford to take them to court. Viola, the banks literally own absolutely everything and nobody has property rights.
Brilliant.
Using tech like this to improve voice recognition and speech synthesis is useful. Using it to verify identities is problematic and should be banned before it causes any serious problems, destroys lives and livelihoods, and wastes resources and time. This is quite possibly the worst, most easily abused application of technology I've ever heard of any government or institution being idiotic or corrupt enough to try.
Signatures... (Score:2)
Using tech like this to improve voice recognition and speech synthesis is useful. Using it to verify identities is problematic and should be banned before it causes any serious problems, destroys lives and livelihoods, and wastes resources and time. This is quite possibly the worst, most easily abused application of technology I've ever heard of any government or institution being idiotic or corrupt enough to try.
Because signatures are such unique and uncopyable things...
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Voiceprints, retina prints, DNA scans, fingerprint scans, hand geometry scans, capillary scans, etc. all have one thing in common: They generate some sort of electronic record. That record can then be stolen and misused.
Unlike a password for my bank or a credit card number, it isn't easily possible to reissue these sorts of biometrics (although some sort of Monty Pythonesque 'Biometric Update Service' showing up at your door with bone saws and graft on parts a la Fankenstein i
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About 20 years ago, Nuance did a demo where they played a recording of Margaret Thatcher, which the system identified as being her. They then asked an impersonator to do the same thing, but the system could tell they weren't Mrs T.
I'm sure these sorts of demos are part truth and part smoke-and-mirrors, but the point being that it was a long time ago and something they claimed to be able to do. You can bet they've got it sorted now so that it's considerably more accurate. I have no idea if they have a means
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I have no idea if they have a means to stop a recording being played back though - that's presumably a harder problem to solve.
"For verification, please say the following words out loud: Propeller. Spinach. Fiberglass. Indonesia."
The system chooses randomly from a list of thousands of words that are easy for an individual to repeat back, but highly unlikely to be recorded and readily accessible to someone using a set of recordings to fool the system.
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The first issue is one of trust. The big banks have in the past foreclosed on homes they did not own a mortgage for, to include homes that did not have a mortgage at all. That's only one example of misconduct by banks. There is absolutely no reason whatsoever to trust that banks would not abuse this to commit forgery. If they intend it to replace other systems, then that is exactly what they will end up doing. Do we really need to debate wheth
Is this one way? (Score:3)
What happens when someone steals the db. Will they now have the data required to emulate the owner's voice against other sound based authentication methods?
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No. The 'print' is something akin to a hash - you can't use it to make a voice synthesiser. I'll leave it to the researchers to figure out if you could construct a synthesiser that created the same 'print', if you knew what the 'print' was to start with - I suspect that'd be possible, but non-trivial (and wouldn't sound anything like the original voice - the original may have said the words "my voice is my password" in a well chiselled English accent, but the synthesiser would only need to say "sfhjie" in a
Oblig. Classic Who (Score:2)
"There is nothing more useless than a lock with a voice print."
How (Score:2)
How does one harvest a "voice" "quietly"?
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Harvested (Score:1)
Notice the MIC is World wide, and look at the nomenclature that is used "harvested", "consumer", "data point" etc.
Nuance ... (Score:2)
... the same people who have yet to get that goddam Dragon Naturally Speaking software tweaked to where it's useful.
Every few years, management makes me order it and when I tell them they have to train it, they want ME to train it and then hand it back to them.
Then management bitches because the fucking thing is useless as tits on a boar hog.
In a chat room, I said, "I don't have a Texas accent."
It came out, "I don't have a Texas accident."
Needs work.
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It came out, "I don't have a Texas accident."
But was it wrong? I don't have one either. I always make sure to plan my reststops carefully.
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LOL, so do it!!
Lock yourself in the server room, and spend the next few days reading gibberish into the microphone while doing an impersonation of your boss. Claim some overtime for it.
Occasionally run up to them with a voice recorder and say "quick, I need you to say this so I can train the speech stuff". Gather enough snippets to be able to stitch together conv
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So you're saying Dilbertize it ... ;p
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LOL ... no, I'm saying BOFH-ize it; pay attention. :-P
Dilbert is quietly optimistic in the face of crushing evidence to the contrary and in defiance of common sense.
BOFH is actively malicious in the knowledge that being optimistic is for suckers who don't create their own fate. ;-)
One leads to soul crushing disappointment. The other can be quite lucrative.
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Yeah, I've always had the power to be the BOFH but I've never given in to the temptation (32 years).
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It's pretty un-nerving what they can do and this is just one company with home grown, or at least home modified software. I ha
Big deal, hollywood has had this tech since the 90 (Score:1)
Hi, my name is Werner Brandes. My voice is my passport. Verify Me.
Oh, great. (Score:2)
Now I have to use a voice scrambler for all my phone calls.
Joining the power of the corporate to the ...state (Score:1)
Hi, my name is...WernerBrandes! (Score:2)
My voice is my, Passport? Verify, me.