Amazon to Discontinue Local Voice Processing on Echo Devices Starting March 28

Share post:

Amazon has announced that, effective March 28, 2025, it will discontinue the “Do Not Send Voice Recordings” feature on select Echo devices, resulting in all voice recordings being processed in the cloud.

Transition to Cloud Processing

Previously, certain Echo models allowed users to process voice commands locally, enhancing privacy by keeping recordings on the device. With this change, all voice interactions will be transmitted to Amazon’s secure cloud servers for processing, even if users opt not to save these recordings.

Introduction of Alexa+

This shift aligns with the upcoming launch of Alexa+, Amazon’s next-generation AI assistant, which leverages advanced generative AI capabilities requiring cloud-based processing. Alexa+ is scheduled to be available in late March, offering enhanced functionalities such as document analysis and storytelling, and will be free for Amazon Prime subscribers or $19.99 per month for non-Prime users.

Amazon’s Data Management Practices and Employee Access to Alexa Recordings

Amazon’s handling of voice recordings from Alexa-enabled devices has raised significant privacy concerns, particularly regarding data management and employee access.

Employee Access to Voice Recordings

In 2019, reports revealed that Amazon employees regularly listened to voice recordings captured by Echo devices. This practice aimed to improve Alexa’s speech recognition capabilities but involved extensive human review.

Federal Trade Commission Findings

In 2023, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reported that tens of thousands of Amazon employees had access to Alexa users’ voice recordings. The FTC criticized Amazon for inadequate access controls, allowing unnecessary employee access to sensitive data.

Privacy Concerns and Legal Actions

These practices have led to legal challenges. In October 2024, Amazon sought to dismiss a lawsuit alleging that Alexa illegally recorded private conversations without consent. The plaintiffs claimed that Alexa devices intercepted conversations beyond intended commands, raising significant privacy issues.

Recommendations for Users

Users concerned about privacy can take steps to manage their data:

  • Review Privacy Settings: Adjust Alexa’s privacy settings to limit data retention and usage.
  • Disable Human Review: Opt out of settings that allow Amazon employees to review voice recordings.

For the rest, you have to trust that Amazon will not misuse your data.

 

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Related articles

Is Lyft Recording It’s Passenger Conversations?

A recent incident in Toronto has raised significant privacy concerns after a Lyft passenger discovered that her private...

ChatGPT’s New Memory Feature Remembers Past Conversations for Personalized Interactions

OpenAI has upgraded ChatGPT with a long-term memory feature, enabling the AI to recall previous conversations and provide...

Google’s DolphinGemma AI Bridges Communication Gap Between Humans and Dolphins

Google has introduced DolphinGemma, an AI model developed in collaboration with Georgia Tech and the Wild Dolphin Project...

New AI Compression Method Could Bring GPT-Style Models to Consumer Hardware

Researchers from MIT, KAUST, ISTA, and Yandex have unveiled a breakthrough in compressing large language models (LLMs), potentially...

Become a member

New, Relevant Tech Stories. Our article selection is done by industry professionals. Our writers summarize them to give you the key takeaways