Hello Barbie violates children's privacy?

Privacy Activists Urge Mattel to Stop Production of Hello Doll , η οποία στέλνει ηχογραφημένες φωνές παιδιών μέσω του Διαδικτύου, για ανάλυση αναγνώρισης φωνής.Hello Barbie Hello Barbie Hello Barbie

Hello Barbie doll is equipped with a small built-in computer, a microphone, a and a Wi-Fi interface. When the toy's belt buckle is pressed, Barbie asks a question, and records the children's answers. These responses are coded and sent encrypted over the Internet to Mattel servers, where they are processed by voice recognition software.

This software then sends back to doll Hello Barbie a command to answer the child. Barbie is programmed with various questions, jokes and teasing, which are collected by digitization software as answers.

This is supposed to convince children that Barbie is a lilliputi boyfriend.

Mattel and from San Francisco ToyTalk developed Hello Barbie, which she debuted last month at Toy Fair 2015 in New York. Since then many have voiced their concerns about privacy violations. The recordings of the children's voices are stored on remote computers so that ToyTalk can apparently improve the voice recognition mechanism.

Today, however Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC) begins to openly oppose it Hello Barbie, citing Registry publications.

The team is upset as the doll gathers the thoughts of a child, and stores them in Mattel's systems. This could be used for commercial and advertising purposes, the activists say.

"If I had a young child, I would be very concerned if my child's conversations were being recorded by the doll to be analyzed later," said Georgetown University Law School professor Angela Campbell, who is also a school counselor at the Center on and Technology.

"At the Mattel show, Barbie asks a lot of questions that could reveal a lot of information about a child, and his family. This information could be of great value to advertisers. "

"Computer Algorithms can not replace - and should not displace - the subtle response of caring for people who interact with each other," said CCFC pediatrician and board member Dr. Dipesh Navsaria, Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.

"Children's well-being comes through the healthy development of the search for relationships through conversations with real people and friends. Children do not need Mattel's prepared commercial messages."

Of course, the company denies the charges and supports its products

All ToyTalk products on the market are designed to comply with or even exceed the Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). "They have also been independently audited and registered as KidSafe +," Oren Jacob, CEO of ToyTalk, told The Register.

"The underlying technology of our products works like Siri, Google Now, and Cortana, and ToyTalk products will never search the open Internet for answers. The answers are carefully crafted by our writing team, and the conversations recorded through our products will never be used for advertising.

Would you buy such a doll for your child?

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Written by Dimitris

Dimitris hates on Mondays .....

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