Amazon is planning to remove a privacy setting on its Echo devices later this month that will allow virtually all voice requests to go to the company's cloud. The company's cloud-based voice ...
Amazon Echo Dot (4th Gen) is one of the three speakers impacted by the change (Picture: Amazon) Amazon is removing a key privacy feature from its Echo smart speakers that one tech expert has ...
Just as Love Is Blind ends season 8, another Netflix reality TV show jumps in to take its place. And we have spent our last few days glued to the screen watching all 10 episodes of Temptation ...
Alexa’s integration with Suno misses the whole point of music. Alexa’s integration with Suno misses the whole point of music. Elizabeth Lopatto is a reporter who writes about tech, money, and ...
Amazon recently confirmed that Alexa users will no longer have the ability to process requests locally, meaning your voice recordings will be stored in Amazon's servers, no matter what you think ...
Amazon is in the process of overhauling Alexa, introducing a new Alexa+ AI service that will be available free of charge for Prime users (or $20 per month on its own). But as the company plans to ...
Amazon is turning off the ability to process voice requests locally. It's a seemingly major privacy pivot and one that some Alexa users might not appreciate. However, this change affects exactly ...
“Top Chef” alum Shirley Chung, 48, has informed her fans that her “fighting spirit” is helping her battle stage four tongue cancer, a type of oral cancer that is also referred to as a head and neck ...
Amazon’s Alexa+ service is rolling out on March 28, and with it supposedly comes a more personalized, intuitive, and powerful digital assistant thanks to its underlying generative AI technology.
Amazon is curtailing a privacy-minded feature that will affect owners of certain Echo devices. In an email sent last Friday to a number of customers, Amazon revealed that as of March 28, it will ...
This story originally appeared on Ars Technica, a trusted source for technology news, tech policy analysis, reviews, and more. Ars is owned by WIRED's parent company, Condé Nast. In an email sent ...