Siri Grading Whistleblower Goes Public With Apple Dissatisfaction

Thomas le Bonniec

The subcontractor who revealed Apple’s Siri grading program is going public. Thomas le Bonniec isn’t satisfied with what happened (via The Guardian).

Siri Grading

In a letter sent to all data protection regulators in the European Union, Mr. Le Bonniec said,

It is worrying that Apple (and undoubtedly not just Apple) keeps ignoring and violating fundamental rights and continues their massive collection of data.

I am extremely concerned that big tech companies are basically wiretapping entire populations despite European citizens being told the EU has one of the strongest data protection laws in the world. Passing a law is not good enough: it needs to be enforced upon privacy offenders.

Thomas le Bonniec
Thomas le Bonniec. Credit: Joris van Gennip via The Guardian

Siri grading is Apple’s term for teams of people who listen to snippets of conversations with Siri in order to improve the assistant. Apple never disclosed this to customers, and it took a whistleblower for the public to find out about it. Since then, Apple changed the program and let customers opt in with an iOS update.

Mr. Le Bonniec believes Apple didn’t face consequences for the issue and wants the company to be “urgently investigated” by data protection authorities and privacy watchdogs.

One thought on “Siri Grading Whistleblower Goes Public With Apple Dissatisfaction

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.