Soon we'll have Siri-like assistants that don't give up our secrets
This summer, Google launched an app called Photos. It’s an incredible tool: If you beam your digital memories to Google’s cloud, the search giant will make your photos searchable by face, by object, and even by emotion, and will use its intelligence to turn your disparate images into albums, movies and gifs. But many of my friends and colleagues refused to try it out. They didn’t want to store all of their photos in Google’s cloud, where they might be stolen by hackers or mined by the search giant for who-knows-what.
Without giving Google access to your camera roll, though, you can’t take advantage of Google’s ‘deep neural networks,’ a powerful form of AI that typically works best in the cloud, where engineers can store the huge amounts of information the programs need to learn. These big models often run on several powerful computers at once. You’re probably using at least one neural-net powered service: Google, Facebook, Apple, and Microsoft, among others, rely on cloud-based neural networks to improve facial recognition, computer vision and speech understanding.
There might be a time when you won’t need to send your personal information to a company’s cloud to take advantage of this intelligence. Companies are starting to develop ’embedded deep neural networks’ that work on your phone and other devices. These do much of the same tasks, but are leaner, travel-sized versions of their cloud-based counterparts that don’t require an Internet connection to work their technological magic. Experts say they’re going to become more and more commonplace with time as more and more “smart” features are packed into apps and devices like security cameras, thermostats, watches, TVs, kitchen appliances and cars.
Take Sensory, for example, a company that develops security and voice-control technology. On Thursday, it released a new version of TrulyHandsfree, an always-on voice-recognition listening system, that benefits from this technology. While much of the AI we interact with on a daily basis—like GoogleNow, Apple’s Siri or Microsoft’s Cortana—is beamed to our devices via the internet, TrulyHandsFree is local.
“When you have a service hosted in the cloud, your personal data is being sent off for people to analyze, where you have no control,” said Sensory CEO Todd Mozer. “When that data is in your device, you control it…[And] the hacker incentive to steal massive amounts of data just isn’t there.”