Could be, or to be more precise, what app is listening to you.I understand the nature of coincidence but sometimes it’s hard to believe.
I was chatting to a friend about his son in the car for a couple of hours. He was telling me all about the boys drum lessons. The conversation went into all manner of things but included the fact that he bought an electronic drum kit, for reasons, and that he chose ones made by Roland.
We got out of the car, I visited MacRumors and this advert appeared. Bear in mind, I’m not musical, I am highly unlikely to have visited sites that suggest I am, I have cross site trackers disabled. I don’t really do social media apart from this and another niche forum.
Is my iPhone listening to me?
That’s got me thinking.Could be, or to be more precise, what app is listening to you.
But it could also be your friends phone that is listening to you both.
Since you are traveling in the same car, might have apps that share data (i.e. google maps) prob have eachother in your contacts and communication apps (whatsapp, telegram) it could be any or both of you.
I don’t mind the ads, I regularly click the ones on this site, as I believe it’s the least I can do for 20+ years of free content.Simple solution: use an adblocker. Let them have my data. They are just wasting their efforts trying to advertise to me, because I never see it.
@AdamInKentIt could just be something simple called Frequency Illusion. Once in a while I'll notice an ad for something that I randomly thought about one day. I doubt my devices are reading my mind.
But otherwise, if it was indeed a targeted ad, there's so many ways that could have happened. I'm guessing your friend was researching drum kits online and/or bought it online. Have you and your friend ever shared the same Wi-FI/IP address? They could have linked you together that way.
Are you guys friends on social media? Advertisers like to show ads to friends, because friends are often interested in the same things.
I don’t think it’s the microphone that’s the problem. Take a moment to consider the worldwide computing power that would be required to listen in to the conversations of everyone with a mobile phone or other smart device 🤯@AdamInKent
The only possibility I can imagine is through WhatsApp, it’s the only one we share in common that has access to the microphone!!
I have no answers but I applaud your skepticism of Google.That’s got me thinking.
I have an Android operating system on my ev car. Unavoidable I’m afraid.
However the account I created for that only lives on the car not my device! I simply never use Google.
There is carplay however!!!!
Conspiracy theory territory now. Can the Google system talk retrieve data from CarPlay?
Your phone’s not actually “listening.”
If a company were secretly recording conversations through your microphone without consent, that would almost certainly violate wiretapping laws (in the U.S. and most other jurisdictions). More importantly, it’s not even necessary for their business model. The amount of data advertisers already collect (search history, app activity, online purchases, social graphs, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth location, and other metadata) is so detailed and predictive that they don’t need to eavesdrop.
What’s happening is ad networks pool a ton of that data and then push ads. If you or anyone in the car has given Facebook or Google location access, they also probably know you were together, and that’s enough for the algorithm to link you and serve you ads in case you are also in the market or can influence your friend.
So when your buddy (who probably did a good bit of research over multiple day/weeks) searched for drums, the system flagged you as someone in his circle and sent you ads too. My wife gets ads for stuff I search (and vice versa, if I turn off my ad blocker). Even if I’ve never spoken to her about the product. Sometimes she’ll joke “don’t even think about buying that new camera” when she start seeings ads for one of my hobbies show up in her feed.
I have a friend who works for a major data firm; he has told me that he thinks if people actually understood how much (and what) data they had on people there would be literal riots. 😬
Then how is it I can talk to my phone about dog food for ten minutes and suddenly see dog food ads on instagram?Also something people who think their devices are eavesdropping forget is: Think of the vast amounts of data processing that would be required to listen in on all of those conversations just to pick out certain keywords. It's completely impractical for a private company to do.
Then how is it I can talk to my phone about dog food for ten minutes and suddenly see dog food ads on instagram?
I don't own a dog.
This stuff is so provable it's not even a question of "if". They are clearly listening in on some pathway, and every time this comes up, there are apologizers saying well it's just they're so sophisticated etc.
There is near zero chance they're so sophisticated that they can assume at 2pm on Monday I will exercise my free will and talk about surf boards for ten minutes (I don't surf) to prove they listen in and they show me ads of it.
This is the where so many conspiracy theories (should) fall apart. Most of these conspiracies would require resources that would make them impractical and impossible to hide. It's like how people point out that the technology needed to successfully fake the moon landing in 1969 would be more difficult and costly than actually just going to the moon!The boring reality is ad networks don’t need to, and doing it would be suicidal for them. Recording everyone’s mic 24/7 would mean collecting petabytes of audio per day, transcribing it in real time across hundreds of languages, and indexing it instantly.
If it is technologically feasible, and I’m not even sure it is, it’d be astronomically expensive, technically unwieldy, and flat-out illegal in most jurisdictions. One leak or subpoena and the company would be finished.
What they do have is cheap, legal, structured data: search history, app use, your friends’ activity, shopping records, location, Wi-Fi networks, IP addresses, device profiles, demographic data, social graphs, and probably thousands of other data points. From that they build “look-alike” audiences. Combined with the sheer number of ads served, coincidences are inevitable (and trust me, you don’t notice the poorly targeted ones as much as you think you do)
It only feels personal because you notice it right after you talked about something. The creepy accuracy comes from massive tracking and probability, not secret eavesdropping.
It's not coincidence, it's really fetching information from you and your family/friends.I understand the nature of coincidence but sometimes it’s hard to believe.
I was chatting to a friend about his son in the car for a couple of hours. He was telling me all about the boys drum lessons. The conversation went into all manner of things but included the fact that he bought an electronic drum kit, for reasons, and that he chose ones made by Roland.
We got out of the car, I visited MacRumors and this advert appeared. Bear in mind, I’m not musical, I am highly unlikely to have visited sites that suggest I am, I have cross site trackers disabled. I don’t really do social media apart from this and another niche forum.
Is my iPhone listening to me?
All of this and more. It's not hard for an advertising network to assume that someone is talking to other people about a large recent purchase, and to send out related advertisements to reinforce that you too should purchase a similar item. Proximity can be determined in a bunch of different ways, as-mentioned even a shared wi-fi network. Unfortunately, not all data transmitted from an iPhone is protected by Private Relay. You have to use a VPN for that. So by being on a shared wi-fi network you have all kinds of juicy information passed along like how long you were together, how many other people you know joined you, what time you were there, etc. But it doesn't even take wi-fi. Bluetooth and other technologies will do. Think about the creepy "contact notifications" from a few years back that could give exact proximities accurate within inches and exact timing for people associating together.The boring reality is ad networks don’t need to, and doing it would be suicidal for them. Recording everyone’s mic 24/7 would mean collecting petabytes of audio per day, transcribing it in real time across hundreds of languages, and indexing it instantly.
If it is technologically feasible, and I’m not even sure it is, it’d be astronomically expensive, technically unwieldy, and flat-out illegal in most jurisdictions. One leak or subpoena and the company would be finished.
What they do have is cheap, legal, structured data: search history, app use, your friends’ activity, shopping records, location, Wi-Fi networks, IP addresses, device profiles, demographic data, social graphs, and probably thousands of other data points. From that they build “look-alike” audiences.
This happens all the time to me and my friends and family. It’s creepy as hell. Your talking about a specific thing and all of a sudden you have a YouTube ad or safari ad with what it is you were discussing. For all the privacy crap Apple talks about and how much the respect your privacy I wonder why they don’t even stop this. A few weeks ago I didn’t even search a mattress online. I ended up going to the mattress store bought something. And that afternoon I have ads about mattresses. Come on now.I understand the nature of coincidence but sometimes it’s hard to believe.
I was chatting to a friend about his son in the car for a couple of hours. He was telling me all about the boys drum lessons. The conversation went into all manner of things but included the fact that he bought an electronic drum kit, for reasons, and that he chose ones made by Roland.
We got out of the car, I visited MacRumors and this advert appeared. Bear in mind, I’m not musical, I am highly unlikely to have visited sites that suggest I am, I have cross site trackers disabled. I don’t really do social media apart from this and another niche forum.
Is my iPhone listening to me?
I agree with everything you’re saying.Your phone’s not actually “listening.”
If a company were secretly recording conversations through your microphone without consent, that would almost certainly violate wiretapping laws (in the U.S. and most other jurisdictions). More importantly, it’s not even necessary for their business model. The amount of data advertisers already collect (search history, app activity, online purchases, social graphs, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth location, and other metadata) is so detailed and predictive that they don’t need to eavesdrop.
What’s happening is ad networks pool a ton of that data and then push ads. If you or anyone in the car has given Facebook or Google location access, they also probably know you were together, and that’s enough for the algorithm to link you and serve you ads in case you are also in the market or can influence your friend.
So when your buddy (who probably did a good bit of research over multiple day/weeks) searched for drums, the system flagged you as someone in his circle and sent you ads too. My wife gets ads for stuff I search (and vice versa, if I turn off my ad blocker). Even if I’ve never spoken to her about the product. Sometimes she’ll joke “don’t even think about buying that new camera” when she start seeings ads for one of my hobbies show up in her feed.
I have a friend who works for a major data firm; he has told me that he thinks if people actually understood how much (and what) data they had on people there would be literal riots. 😬