Erosion of privacy is eating into our security and a principle source is the little device that many find indispensible – the smartphone. Metropeople clutching their mobiles, like Gollum gripping his “precious”, are now legion.
In the early days, mobile phones were more of an irritation to others than to the user. The old “brick” phones were plonked on restaurant tables as an ostentatious display of wealth, making Filofaxes look so passé.
As the phones reduced in size, voice pollution became the big annoyance as people bellowed responses to unheard correspondents. Many is the journey I have taken to the accompaniment of someone rollicking a provider of a service for not delivering, or spouses rowing with their invisible partners.
Now we have two more potential leaks – vociferous personal assistants and location services.
Siri, the first true personal assistant, is an amazing app on the iPhone. It mixes straightforward diary event reminders with quite complex reasoning that allows a degree of artificial intelligence. Asking if you need an umbrella today will get the phones digital synapses crackling to make the links between umbrella, rain and weather reports.
All very clever but people are idiots who, unlike Siri, forget things. Things, in this case, being forgetting to turn the voice off. Let’s face it, most people have embarrassed themselves by leaving their phones turned on only to have their ringtone sound at an inopportune moment. Conferences, television interviews, weddings and funerals have all been tarnished by unmuted MP3 interruptions.
At some point Siri, or its Android equivalent Iris (see what they did there?), will blurt out some secret in public: “You have an appointment at the special clinic in twenty minutes”.
Worse still: “Don’t forget to get Miriam a present for her birthday” followed by a swift battering from a wife whose name is obviously not Miriam and a night in the doghouse.
Apart from time, Siri works on location. “Remind me to get a bunch of flowers when I get near my house”. And iCloud, a key part of iOS 5 functionality almost demands the use of location if the user wants to take advantage of apps such as “Find My Phone” or “Find My Friends”.
To think that only weeks ago this was a hot topic for debate and now it seems to be an acceptable requirement.
So apart from the unwary letting those nearby know intimate details of their lives, their location will be traceable and that kind of information will attract the attention of the police forces of the world.
Bit by bit the wall of privacy is being chipped away. It is a fool who says, “Those with nothing to hide have nothing to fear.” Tell that to the Jews who almost overnight went from being acceptable members of society to being considered an evil that should be eliminated in Nazi Germany.
In a prescient moment Benjamin Franklin wrote: “Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.”
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