Amazon reportedly working to get Alexa to distinguish between different voices
Amazon is reportedly working on a new feature for its
Alexa voice assistant that would allow for individual voice recognition,
according to a report from Time. In other words, your Echo would theoretically be able to tell voices apart and figure out who is actually talking to it.
According to Time, the feature is internally
known as “Voice ID” and has been in development since summer 2015. The
report claims that Voice ID would allow certain commands to be locked to
a specific voice — for example, only allowing the account holder to
purchase things off Amazon (something that’s certainly been an issue in the past). Alexa actually already supports multiple user profiles
and PIN verification for purchases, but automating the process through
voice recognition would certainly make it easier to take advantage of
those features. (The current system requires users to manually change
accounts and input passwords.)
Obviously, the voice recognition feature would bring a
whole new slew of privacy concerns to Alexa, which is already embroiled
in legal controversy regarding user data. One of Time’s
sources claims that the feature is actually already finished from a
technical perspective and that Amazon is simply trying to figure out a
way to roll it out to Alexa users without compromising privacy.
Whether or not that’s actually the case, Voice ID is
certainly an interesting idea that would neatly solve one of the main
issues with owning an Echo — assuming it exists and reliably works, that
is. We’ll have more on Amazon’s expansion of Alexa’s voice recognition
abilities if and when we hear more.
The article was published on : theverge
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