Abstract

Over the last few years, smart speakers such as Amazon Echo and Google Home have become increasingly present within British households. Yet, privacy remains a prominent concern in the public discourse about smart speakers, as well as in the nascent academic literature. We argue that privacy in the context of smart speakers is more complex than in other settings due to smart speakers’ specific technological affordances and also the axial relationships between users, the device, device manufacturers, application developers, and other third parties such as moderation contractors and data brokers. With survey data from Amazon Echo and Google Home users in the UK, we explore users’ privacy concerns and privacy protection behaviors related to smart speakers. We rely on a contextual understanding of privacy, assessing the prevalence of seven distinct privacy concern types as well as three privacy protection behaviors. The results indicate that concerns about third parties, such as contractors listening to smart speaker recordings, are most pronounced. Privacy protection behaviors are uncommon but partly affected by privacy concerns and motives such as social presence and utilitarian benefits. Taken together, our research paints a picture of privacy pragmatism or privacy cynicism among smart speaker users.

Highlights

  • Smart speakers are voice-controlled mobile devices which use artificial intelligence (AI) and natural language processing to facilitate a variety of functional and hedonic tasks, such as playing music, setting reminders, and retrieving information (Lau, Zimmerman, and Schaub 2018)

  • Of the 367 respondents, 263 reported using an Amazon Echo (72%), 73 a Google Home (20%), 12 an Apple HomePod (3%), and 3 (1%) another speaker

  • We focus on the Amazon Echo and Google Home group (n 1⁄4 336) due to the small number of Apple HomePod and Sonos users in our sample

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Summary

Introduction

Smart speakers are voice-controlled mobile devices which use artificial intelligence (AI) and natural language processing to facilitate a variety of functional and hedonic tasks, such as playing music, setting reminders, and retrieving information (Lau, Zimmerman, and Schaub 2018). Located in the home and sometimes embedded within a larger “smart home” ecosystem, smart speakers are quickly becoming mainstream. While smart speakers have enjoyed rapid uptake among consumers, research has only started to investigate this technology (Hoy 2018; Smith 2020). Recent humanmachine communication research has quickly advanced our understanding of communication modalities with smart speakers and other non-embodied virtual personal assistants (Guzman 2017, 2019)

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