Snapchat’s My AI – A Youthful Playground or a Privacy Nightmare?

19

October

2023

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A post on this very blog site from 2018 called Snapchat a platform in decline, and I agree with that statement. Not since my high school years have I regularly used Snapchat to communicate with someone. After a long period of inactivity and countless notifications piling up, I decided to open the app some months back and was met with a notification about updates to their Privacy Policy. At that moment I did not give it much attention, just agreed to the terms, and went to the user interface. A new feature at the top of the Chat function caught my eye, My AI.
My AI is a customizable, user friendly, engaging AI chatbot and is one among the many actions Snapchat has undertaken to regain their popularity. Remember those times when you opened Snapchat and disappointedly closed it, no new notifications and no one to talk to? My AI solves that issue, giving constant company to you in the form of information and entertainment, designed to better understand and cater your preferences. It is effectively your AI best friend, but less transactional than other AIs.

I don’t know if it was curiosity or boredom, but my mind immediately raced back to the updated Privacy Policy and I decided to give the whole thing a read. As of 15th August 2023, their new Privacy Policy contains some important changes. A major change here is expanding the amount and type of data Snapchat stores, most recently including conversations with My AI. This is on top of all the information Snapchat already amasses from their users, such as usage, content, device, and location information. “But every social media platform personalizes their user experience and employs targeted advertising?”, you might say. Point noted, which is why I moved on to how this data is being used by their affiliate companies. The screenshot below is the only information I could find, and clicking on the link would only lead me into an endless loop within the Privacy Policy statement.  

If I still haven’t been able to make you raise your eyebrows, I urge you to recognize Snapchat’s target group: teenagers.
Did your fourteen-year-old self have the same level of digital maturity and behavior that you currently possess? Did you truly understand the extent to which your data is collected, let alone the fact that this data determines the content you interact with on a platform? And finally, consider the rationale of using Snapchat: Why send pictures or texts that are deleted after being opened unless you do not want them to be saved? Other than by Snapchat, of course.

Attached below is the help my AI best friend on Snapchat provided me about a ‘common’ problem for teenagers. Make of that what you will.

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Introduction to Certified Artifical Intelligence & Big Data: Uses and Benefits

24

September

2022

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To Be Sure That You’re Secure

Artificial Intelligence (AI) coupled with Big Data Analytics allows more data to be processed, analyzed and aggregated than any human will ever be able to do. This present us with unprecedented situations and possibly limitless boundaries with what we are able to do with data, how we use data, the insights we can gain, and the decisions which we can make based on these data.

Seeing as businesses and individuals are already using these technologies on a grand scale and looking to integrate the these technologies evermore, care must be taken to handle the security-related concerns which may arise (bsigroup, 2022). An example of this are ecossytems which eventually will emerge in the automotive industry where incumbents will use AI and Big Data with their value chain partners to gather, analyze, and leverage customer data to improve their value proposition towards customers based on their analyzed needs (Walton, 2019).

Source: (Walton, 2019)

One Standard for AI and Big Data

An internationally agreed upon defined sets of standards defined by stakeholders such as field experts, specialists, and government institutions. This is what an iso certification entails. It helps to set boundaries and provide best practices to all industries available. The standards facilitate a way to internationally collaborate based on uniform principles for domains such as technologies, processes, and manufacturing to ensure that industry regulations, societal safety and ethical concerns will be met (bsigroup, 2022; Gasiorowski-Denis, 2019).

The benefits and uses for AI and Big Data

Knowing whether you can trust a partner and how they work fosters greater collaboration capabilities and innovations. Practical examples are the medical field where bias in AI for organ transplants will be limited and a more trustworthy selection process can ensue, developing AI applications, the assessment of machine learning classification performance, and the data life cycle of AI where the quality of governance and data measurements are also factored in (Gasiorowski-Denis, 2019; ISO/IEC TS 4213, 2022; iso, 2022).

Sources

bsigroup. (2022). How standards support emerging technologies. Retrieved from bsigroup: https://www.bsigroup.com/en-GB/standards/Information-about-standards/standards-and-new-business-areas/

Gasiorowski-Denis, E. (2019, November 11). Embracing the power of technology. Retrieved from iso: https://www.iso.org/news/ref2451.html

iso. (2022). Standards by ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 42: Artificial Intelligence. Retrieved from iso: https://www.iso.org/committee/6794475/x/catalogue/p/0/u/1/w/0/d/0

ISO/IEC TS 4213. (2022, 10). Retrieved from iso: https://www.iso.org/standard/79799.html?browse=tc

Walton, B. (2019). Disruption in the automotive industry. Retrieved September 17, 2022, from https://www2.deloitte.com/content/dam/Deloitte/uk/Documents/ConsumerIndustrialProducts/deloitte-uk-consumer-industrial-products-how-digital-is-changing-car-sales.pdf

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