Amazons privacy nightmare Astro bot will fling itself downstairs be useless for security developers reportedly claim
Developers who worked on Amazonâs new home robot Astro say it's a âprivacy nightmareâ and will âthrow itself down a flight of stairsâ. The retail giant claims, however, that the $999 device will offer âpeace of mindâ to users.
Unveiled on Tuesday, the Alexa-enabled household robot can apparently do everything an Echo device can â" including playing TV shows and making video calls â" but is also designed to follow people around the house and track behavior using its facial recognition and machine learning systems.
Citing leaked internal development documents and video footage of software development meetings, Viceâs Motherboard reported that the robot forces users to âenrollâ the faces and voices of anyone likely to be in the house and conducts âpatrolsâ when âunidentifiedâ people are around, âlooking and listening for unusual activityâ.
As part of this âSentry Modeâ, the robot will investigate any âunrecognized personâ or âaudio eventâ it detects until the feature is disabled. Once it notices a âpresenceâ, it will then apparently approach or follow the stranger and initiate a series of âinvestigation activitiesâ, including recording video and audio that it then automatically uploads for later viewing.
Also on rt.com âWeâre screwedâ: Amazon introduces first household robot to wave of mockery, privacy concernsAccording to a social robotics document accessed by the outlet, the goal was to make Astro â" referred to by its internal project code name Vesta â" an âintelligent robotâ capable of âsome simple but magical interactions with people.â
However, one unidentified developer who worked on the project told Motherboard that the deviceâs human recognition system was âunreliable at bestâ, adding that using it as a home security option was âlaughableâ. The developer noted that the âdevice feels fragile for something with an absurd costâ and pointed to issues like broken masts â" which would not be fixed since there is no way to ship the machine back to Amazon.
They break themselves and will almost certainly fall down stairs in real world usersâ homes.
One developer said that pushing Astro as an âaccessibility deviceâ was âabsurdist nonsenseâ and âpotentially dangerous.â
The outlet quoted another unnamed developer who claimed that it was ânot ready for releaseâ and labelled the robot âa privacy nightmare that is an indictment of our society and how we trade privacy for convenienceâ with such devices.
An additional privacy concern is the robotâs design feature to integrate with Amazonâs controversial Ring products and Alexa Guard, the companyâs home security service. Privacy watchdog Electronic Frontier Foundation alleged last year that the Ring app was âpacked with third-party trackersâ that collected names, private IP addresses and mobile network carriers, among other identifying data.
Also on rt.com Amazon, Facebook & Uber pledge to hire Afghan refugees to support US economic âvisionâIn response to the criticism, Amazon has said that it had consulted with academics specializing in âcomputer visionâ and âalgorithmic biasâ when developing the robotâs person-recognition systems. According to one of these scholars, the company was âthoughtful in the design, testing, and augmentation of their approaches as driven by data and feedback in order to minimize bias from their visual ID feature.â
Amazon said negative characterizations of the robotâs performance, mast, and safety systems were âsimply inaccurateâ and claimed it had gone through ârigorous testing on both quality and safety, including tens of thousands of hours of testing with beta participants.â
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