…within reason. I know that the top answer will be to flash a different OS on your device. A lot of us are not at that point right now.

So I was texting with my wife in Spanish and suddenly a system bubble popped up, “would you like to translate this to English?” At a minimum, this means that Google is reading the words on my screen at all times to detect the language. I don’t know if this is possibly done on device, but translation certainly isn’t. I’ve already changed my system translation app to Translate You.

I’ve noticed other times that Google watches or listens in the background. It has a feature to detect ambient songs playing, for example.

What other standard settings should I check for to prevent Google from watching and listening to my phone in the background?

Edit: I was not using a Google messeging app at the time. It was detecting the text from another app. The specific setting in this case was to switch off “Live Translate,” in System settings.

  • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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    I don’t know how helpful it will be, but probably the best thing to do is to just find ways to decrease its use. For me, I made two big changes:

    1. Bought a step counter.
    2. Bought an alarm clock.

    Those two purchases mean I can turn my phone off at night completely and only have to have it on during the day when I’m actually using it.

    That’ll help cut down on the data collection. Technologically, I don’t think there’s a way to have it on 24/7 and completely turn off its native data collecting elements.

    • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      If you do need to have it on 24/7, the two biggest changes you can make are turning off location services and mic/content access on all of the apps you use.

      It’s not a 100% solution, but it’ll cut down on a lot of the nonsense.

      • meco03211@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Now if only there was a way to make it quit nagging me to turn on location every time I try to use maps. I fucking know location is off you stupid fucking “smart” phone.

        • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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          I have mine set so I’m prompted to enable my location ‘this time only’, so I get a popup to prompt me whenever I open a maps app. The other options I have are to enable it ‘when app is in use’ and ‘always’, neither of which I like, personally.

          I’m not sure if that’s a universal thing though.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    TrackerControl is an effective firewall. Blocking internet access to most google apps, like google framework. It should suffice for most of your needs. Even if it detects something, the data won’t be sent to their servers.

    Do test to see if any other services end up broken while blocked.

    • Ibaudia@lemmy.world
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      How is the battery draw on that? I see it uses a local VPN which I imagine would affect it somewhat.

  • pete_the_cat@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You can download AdGuard (it’s not in the Play Store, download it from their website) and block Internet access, selectively, for pretty much any app (even system apps) and to any domain name. I’ve been using it for years to block ads. It’s not free, it’s like $10/year, but it’s better than something free like NextDNS.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOP
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      Heliboard is excellent. I’ve been using the privacy focused FUTO keyboard, which meets my needs a little better. It’s not open source, but it is source available, so I trust it as long as that’s the case. Otherwise, heliboard would easily be my top choice.

  • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    I don’t care if I’m the most downvoted for this, and I read your disclaimer but… iPhone. I loved Android but switched to iOS after playing with my partner’s phone and I couldn’t be happier. All the weird privacy invasive things like Siri (which I aways have disabled), image recognition/search, FaceID, and all that are on-device and send no data out. My current phone is six years old and works perfectly, and I’ve never reformatted it.

    I know lemmy hates Apple, but if you want a phone where an advertising company isn’t constantly spying on everything you do and don’t want to fiddle with installing a different OS, it’s amazing.

    • hightrix@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      This is the answer.

      Don’t buy a phone made by an advertising company if you don’t want everything you use it for to feed ads data.

        • GoogleSellsAds@sh.itjust.works
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          Are you seriously that dumb that you’re comparing selling ads in a store (the App Store) with selling ads on every other inch of the internet?

          There is quite some difference between selling ad-space in a store and having ads as your one and only business model. You wouldn’t know of course and that’s why you are a Google fanboy.

    • pop@lemmy.ml
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      I know lemmy hates Apple, but if you want a phone where an advertising company isn’t constantly spying on everything you do and don’t want to fiddle with installing a different OS, it’s amazing.

      Ignorance is truly bliss, isn’t it?

      https://searchads.apple.com/

      All the weird privacy invasive things like Siri (which I aways have disabled), image recognition/search, FaceID, and all that are on-device and send no data out

      Did you check their source code? monitored their network traffic with mitm proxy? or just believed what Apple told ya?

      Wanna try another talking point you “heard” to feel better about using Apple?

      • GoogleSellsAds@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        Great, let me contact Apple to roll out my advertisement strategy.

        Oh damn, it’s only about ads in their app store. They must make a killer now they’re in Google’s market of web advertising.

      • undefined@links.hackliberty.org
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        I think the truth is somewhere in the middle. I’ve MITM’d myself many times and sure, Apple sends some telemetry and has a few advertising domains but for the most part a solid VPN with custom DNS blocklists (and blocking Apple’s crazy DoH service used to serve ads in News) I’m pretty happy.

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    2 months ago

    If you are a little into tech-stuff, I would recommend you a alternative AndroidOS, like eOs https://e.foundation/e-os/

    I use eOs for 5 years now and Im satisfied. Its not the full userfriendly Apple-Experience, but most stuff works quite well.

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    2 months ago

    …within reason. I know that the top answer will be to flash a different OS on your device. A lot of us are not at that point right now.

    As long as you know the real answer already.


    Do a factory reset on the phone, disable EVERY app you don’t want to use (app info, disable works in modern AOSP even for apps you can’t uninstall like youtube)

    Don’t link your google account to the phone.

    Test your phone by saying “OK Google” and making sure it doesn’t respond.

    Slowly install the apps you want / need, testing the “ok google” and spanish text to see if it triggers some data-scraping service.

    • thermal_shock@lemmy.world
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      interesting idea, would test on an old device or spare device before wiping my phone though, you may not like the results and puts you back at square one with all your stuff gone and have to reset it all anyway.

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    2 months ago

    FWIW, music detection happens on device with a relatively small library of hashes.

    When music plays nearby, your phone compares a few seconds of music to its on-device library to try to recognize the song. This processing happens on your phone and is private to you.

    That’s for Pixels. I believe the result also stays on your phone.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOP
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      Wow, I had no idea. that’s pretty impressive. I know that it also keeps a record of every song detected. I’m not sure if that stays on device or not.

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    I’m guessing you’re using a Pixel phone? My partner’s phone does the same background music detection, I think it’s gross. These are some of the things I’ve done to help prevent the most obvious examples of spying on my Samsung:

    Disable all permissions except ones that you absolutely cannot live without, set those to “ask every time.”

    Use a physical camera cover whenever you’re not taking a photo.

    Turn off location anytime you’re not actively using navigation.

    use a VPN with always-on settings enabled.

    stop using Google apps entirely (Chrome, Mail, Maps, YouTube, etc.) Switch to web browsing on Firefox with unlock Origin installed

    There’s probably some way to directly uninstall other Google bloatware on your phone. I recently followed this tutorial to delete Samsung’s voice assistant from my device, I’m sure there’s a similar process for the Pixel

      • mommykink@lemmy.world
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        No idea, but it’s a sacrifice you need to make to un-Google yourself. I personally use Waze (owned by Google apparently, but still) with location services set to ask me every time

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        I believe Waze does. But I use google maps sinply because it has the most accurate real-time info because of the sheer volume of data it crowdsources.

        • hendu@lemmy.world
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          Waze does, but it’s also owned by Google. IIRC, Waze is where Google gets the data for police locations in maps.

  • trailee@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    but translation certainly isn’t [done on device]

    Google Translate has downloadable language packs and runs on device, including offline in foreign countries without roaming data. Including the live video OCR and replacement.

    That’s not to say that what you experienced isn’t creepy, but it’s not necessarily cloud-driven.

    • gedaliyah@lemmy.worldOP
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      Fair enough. I’ve also been using an incredible on-device translator, RTranslator, which is truly next-level, and FOSS. If anyone else out there has translation needs, I highly recommend it!