Fast food giant Burger King attempted to trigger the Google Assistant in the latest Android smartphones and Google Home to explain what a ‘Whopper’ burger is.
Burger King came up with a 15-second advert in which a person kitted out in its firm’s uniform and holding a Whopper burger declares: “OK Google, what is the Whopper burger?”
The idea was that anyone with a Google Home, the search giant’s take on the Amazon Echo smart speaker, or with an Android smartphone featuring the Google Assistant, like the LG G6 and Google’s Pixel phones, would prompt the Google Assistant in the devices to start reading the Wikipedia entrance for the Whopper.
While the advert treads somewhere between a prank and a form of smart home hack, it was not well received due to concerns over security and privacy, and some people made humorous edits to the Whopper Wikipedia page to somewhat reverse the advert’s goals.
So it would appear that Burger King’s marketing stunt has backfired rather heavily despite the fast food chain’s rather creative attempt at advertising.
However, the situation does raise concerns over the security of such voice-activated devices, particularity as their functionality is ever expanding.
The Amazon Alexa supporting Echo speaker can order Uber rides from a users voice command, so if that were to be hijacked via an advert or other audio source, it could wreak havoc for the user and Uber drivers.
Security concerns are nothing new in smart devices, with the likes of Intel and BitDefender moving targeting smart home security.
But such ‘non-cyber’ hacks could present a whole new cyber security challenge for always-on voice activated smart devices.
Quiz: What do you know about the Internet of Things?
Troubled battery maker Northvolt reportedly considers Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States as…
Microsoft's cloud business practices are reportedly facing a potential anti-competitive investigation by the FTC
Ilya Lichtenstein sentenced to five years in prison for hacking into a virtual currency exchange…
Target for Elon Musk's lawsuit, hate speech watchdog CCDH, announces its decision to quit X…
Antitrust penalty. European Commission fines Meta a hefty €798m ($843m) for tying Facebook Marketplace to…
Elon Musk continues to provoke the ire of various leaders around the world with his…