this post was submitted on 16 Feb 2024
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Privacy

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As a medical doctor I extensively use digital voice recorders to document my work. My secretary does the transcription. As a cost saving measure the process is soon intended to be replaced by AI-powered transcription, trained on each doctor's voice. As I understand it the model created is not being stored locally and I have no control over it what so ever.

I see many dangers as the data model is trained on biometric data and possibly could be used to recreate my voice. Of course I understand that there probably are other recordings on the Internet of me, enough to recreate my voice, but that's beside the point. Also the question is about educating them, not a legal one.

How do I present my case? I'm not willing to use a non local AI transcribing my voice. I don't want to be percieved as a paranoid nut case. Preferravly I want my bosses and collegues to understand the privacy concerns and dangers of using a "cloud sollution". Unfortunately thay are totally ignorant to the field of technology and the explanation/examples need to translate to the lay person.

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[–] [email protected] 8 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) (1 children)

Your voice-print is worth protecting.

There's already retirement funds activating "my voice is my password" by default, now. (You can, and absolutely should opt-out, if yours does.) And you can't change your voice-print if it gets leaked. (Maybe with a professional voice coach, you could...)

Personally, I would change employers over this, if I had the option.

I think we're heading towards having a group of citizens with compromised voice-prints leaked to the dark web, who have a harder time day to day through no fault of their own. Like the early SSN breach sufferers, history tells us that society says "it's a shame", and tries to protect the next generation properly, but doesn't recompense those hurt by the early bullshit.

While job searching, I would also request an accomodation, and not use the voice system. It's much easier for the employer to retain a secretary for you, than to deal with the legal hassles that will come up if they try to fire you for not using their legal-gray-area solution.

Even granted the accommodation, I would be looking for my next job though.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 9 months ago

Most places use this sort of software (at least, larger companies). I have worked with doctors who refused to use it and instead developed templates for common items they copied + pasted into the MAR software / PACS, etc., and they just type what they need. That’s what they did before dictation software existed anyway. It’s not as efficient, but it’s basically the only way to avoid this.