Google will ‘permanently remove’ Home Mini feature that led to constant recording

Google will ‘permanently remove’ Home Mini feature that led to constant recording

7 years ago
Anonymous $uquhsGEL_U

https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2017/10/11/16462572/google-home-mini-permanently-remove-top-touch-after-recording-issue

Google has decided to “permanently remove” the feature that led to a “small number” of Home Mini units accidentally recording thousands of times a day, instead of just when a user triggers it. In a statement released today, the company said that it made the decision because “we want people to have complete peace of mind while using Google Home Mini.”

The Home Mini shipped with a feature that let owners activate the Google Assistant and control music by tapping the top of the speaker. But it turned out that some units had an issue: they would register touches even when no one was there, leading the units to start recording over and over and over again, which is pretty darn creepy. Android Police identified the error on one of its review units, and Google resolved the problem before any Home Mini units could actually ship out to customers (aside from however many it gave out at events). The software fix is supposed to be rolled out October 15th, a few days before the Mini ships.

Google will ‘permanently remove’ Home Mini feature that led to constant recording

Oct 12, 2017, 1:12am UTC
https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2017/10/11/16462572/google-home-mini-permanently-remove-top-touch-after-recording-issue >Google has decided to “permanently remove” the feature that led to a “small number” of Home Mini units accidentally recording thousands of times a day, instead of just when a user triggers it. In a statement released today, the company said that it made the decision because “we want people to have complete peace of mind while using Google Home Mini.” >The Home Mini shipped with a feature that let owners activate the Google Assistant and control music by tapping the top of the speaker. But it turned out that some units had an issue: they would register touches even when no one was there, leading the units to start recording over and over and over again, which is pretty darn creepy. Android Police identified the error on one of its review units, and Google resolved the problem before any Home Mini units could actually ship out to customers (aside from however many it gave out at events). The software fix is supposed to be rolled out October 15th, a few days before the Mini ships.