On the record: Siri is a spy

The ACLU reports that Siri, Apple’s personal assistant, is sending data that can include transcripts and recordings of your questions off to Apple for corporate use.

It came as a surprise to some folks at a recent SXSW talk that Apple’s Siri “personal assistant” isn’t just working for us, it’s working full-time for Apple too by sending lots of our personal voice and user info to Apple to stockpile in its databases. Take a peek at Siri’s privacy policy (which, by the way, is pretty difficult to find) and you’ll realize what’s happening behind the scenes.

What info of yours is being collected and how is it

being used? When you use Siri, it’s sending your “Voice Input Data” and “User Data” to Apple to be used for a variety of purposes.

Voice Input Data is all the types of data associated with your verbal commands and may also include audio recordings, transcripts of what you said, and related diagnostic data. Apple says this Voice Input Data is being used to process your request and to help Siri better recognize your commands, but it’s additionally being used “generally to improve the overall accuracy and performance of Siri and other Apple products and services.”

Siri also collects “User Data” that it says gives it more context for your commands, like what you mean by “Call Dad.” This information can be pretty wide-ranging:

• The names of your address book contacts, their nicknames, and their relationship with you (for example, “my dad”, or “work”)
• Your first name and nickname
• Labels you assign to your email accounts (for example, “My Home Email”)
•Names of songs and playlists in your collection

This data can be really personal, like if you ask Siri, “where is the nearest abortion clinic?” And once Voice Input Data and User Data is collected, Apple reserves the right to share it with “Apple’s partners who are providing related services to Apple.”

Not sure that Siri is worth the serious data it’s collecting and how it might end up getting used? Rather live without Siri? Here’s how to opt out and stop your voice data and user data from continuing to be sent to Apple.

Opting out of Siri

• Tap Settings > General > Siri.
• Slide the Siri option to “off.”

Once you turn off Siri, Apple’s privacy policy says it will delete User Data and any recent Voice Input Data. Though older Voice Input Data that has been already “disassociated” from you and your device may linger for an undisclosed period of time to “improve Siri and other Apple products and services.”

Additional Note to Self: Find out what services like Siri are doing before you start using them. One way to stay informed is to keep up with the ACLU’s dotRights digital privacy campaign (you can follow us on Facebook and Twitter). There may be a lot more going on than initially meets the eye.

Local state aid dropped by almost 10%

State aids to local units of government dropped a whopping $96 million, or almost 10%, from 2010 to 2011, according to the city.

Ouch. The numbers don’t cover every dollar that flows from the state to local taxing units, but do provide an apples to apples comparison of the change in the main sources of state aid.

The figures are on property tax bills sent out last week and appear to be reported correctly. (The city messed up the 2010 net property taxes levied on individual properties.)
Every local taxing unit took a hit, according to the property tax bill. Here’s the scoop, per the tax bills and our good friend, Microsoft Excel.

Bill would make city fees deductible from state income taxes

Homeowners who pay sewer, storm sewer, water, and garbage collection fees (that’s us, Milwaukee!) would be able to deduct the amounts from their state income taxes, under a bill pending in the State Legislature.

The bill has bipartisan sponsorship and the support of the City of Milwaukee, according to city and state records. It’s main author is State Rep. Josh D. Zepnick, and Assembly co-authors are David Cullen and Jason Fields, both Milwaukee Democrats, and Richard Spanbauer, an Oshkosh Republican. Senate co-sponsors are Tim Carpenter (D-Milwaukee) and Mary Lazich (R-New Berlin).

Milwaukee Ald. Joe Davis asked during a Common Council committee meeting last month whether the proposal could inspire Republican legislators to cap the amount the city could charge. City lobbyist Paul Vornholt said fees already are capped at 100% of costs, but added that the deduction proposal could draw attention to the fee issue.

“I’ll just tell you that municipalities across the state are turning to fees right now and Milwaukee is going to be joined by a whole choir of support in maintaining fees,” he told the Judiciary and Legislation Committee.

Under the proposal, the deduction would apply only to state income taxes and only to residents’ primary homes.


 

Package pincher released

The man arrested after taking an Amazon.com package from outside a Story Hill home was released from custody quicker than Santa can slide down a chimney.

The eagle-eyed neighbor who spotted the miscreant miscreating in the first place sends along this description in case he should re-prowl for pinchable packages.

He was tall (around 6 ft.), thin, African-American, 50 years old. He was wearing jeans, and a dark jacket, with a lighter blue back pack worn on his back with both straps. He was not disheveled or anything like that. He was carrying a cup of coffee when I first spotted him and he was not looking into peoples’ yards or drawing attention to himself. While it is now clear he was looking for packages, he was not obvious about it.

Shop Amazon’s Holiday Flurry Week

Man with purloined package busted in Story Hill

It’s that time of year — package-swiping season.

A man who looked suspicious to an eagle-eyed neighbor was arrested Tuesday mornig after said eagle-eyed neighbor saw the man walk away from a house on Bluemound Rd. with a package in his hands that he was not carrying moments before. The eagle-eyed neighbor alerted police. The police responded in a timely fashion — yay!!

Thank you, eagle-eyed neighbor! Good going, Milwaukee Police Department!