IBM paranoid Apple’s Siri could steal corporate secrets, bans use on company networks

“Apple’s Siri voice-recognition software, a staple on the iPhone 4S, is one of the great consumer electronics advances in memory,” Kensey Lamb reports for Yahoo Finance. “It can, with uncanny accuracy, answer a seemingly endless variety of questions posed by the user. Many iPhone owners say it has become an absolutely essential part of managing their daily lives–both business and personal. But the employees of the world’s largest tech company, IBM, cannot use it, according to comments from the firm’s chief technology officer, Jeanette Horan.”

“IBM has a right to be paranoid. It regularly issues more patents each year than any other company – 5,896 last year in 2010,” Lamb reports. “IBM has to keep track of more than 440,000 people who produce over $110 billion in sales.”

Lamb reports, “Horan is in charge of all the company’s internal use of IT. Her worry about Siri is that Apple takes all communications made through the Siri function of the iPhone 4S and sends them to a data center to be translated and answered. No one outside Apple is certain how long the data is stored or who sees it… IBM can be accused of being ridiculously cautious. In reality, it is no more so than Apple, the creator of Siri.”

Read more in the full article here.

Reader Feedback

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