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						Google debuts privacy controls, principles at I/O event
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		 [May 08, 2019]   
		By Paresh Dave 
 MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (Reuters) - Alphabet 
		Inc's Google business on Tuesday announced new privacy controls for its 
		services, including “Incognito mode” for Google Maps, and published new 
		privacy commitments for its hardware, showing how increased public 
		scrutiny is forcing greater transparency in Silicon Valley.
 
 The announcements were dotted throughout nearly two hours of product 
		updates from the search giant at its annual Google I/O developers' 
		conference. Google also launched its lowest priced smartphone yet, the 
		Pixel 3a, and demonstrated upcoming capabilities for its virtual 
		assistant, such as car rental and movie ticket bookings by voice 
		commands.
 
 Google has been fending off some of the growing legislative and 
		regulatory pushes in the United States and elsewhere to regulate data 
		privacy and other issues core to its business model. Proposals being 
		weighed by lawmakers would limit how Google, Facebook Inc and other 
		internet companies track consumers and distribute information.
 
 With revenue growth slowing and costs largely growing, Alphabet has 
		faced questions from investors about the threat of new rules and its 
		ability to commercialize newer services such as the Google Assistant.
 
		
		 
		
 Alphabet shares closed Tuesday down 1.2 percent to $1,178.86. They have 
		fallen from an all-time high of $1,296.98 since the company reported 
		quarterly sales last month that were $1 billion below expectations.
 
 Incognito mode, which is launching on Google Maps "soon" and Google 
		search later this year, would block the company from storing user 
		activity in those services, the company said.
 
 For home-based devices including smart speakers, thermostats and 
		security alarms, Google on Tuesday published a new website with 
		disclosures on how sensors such as microphones and cameras on those 
		devices work. In addition, it committed to giving users the ability to 
		review any sensor recordings and delete them.
 
 Further, the company said it would not use "video footage, audio 
		recordings, and home environment sensor readings" to personalize ads.
 
 Other privacy announcements included more granular control starting 
		later this year over how mobile apps for Google's Android operating 
		system access location data.
 
 "The central focus of the release is security and privacy," Stephanie 
		Cuthbertson, director of product management for Android, said on stage.
 
		
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			Stephanie Cuthbertson, senior director of Android at Google, 
			discusses the mobile operating system during the Google I/O 
			developers conference in Mountain View, California, U.S. May 7, 
			2019. REUTERS/Paresh Dave 
            
			 
NEW ASSISTANT OPTIONS
 The car booking capability, which Google demonstrated on National Car Rental's 
website, builds on the company's push over the last two years to integrate more 
artificial intelligence-fueled features into its virtual helper, Google 
Assistant.
 
 It aims to free users from manually filling out forms on websites, Google Chief 
Executive Sundar Pichai told the several thousand conference attendees. It will 
be available later this year on Android phones in the United States and United 
Kingdom, Google said.
 
In an update to search, Google introduced augmented reality technology that 
enables users to view three-dimensional renderings of some visual results 
through their smartphone cameras. Google said it was working with companies such 
as New Balance, Target Corp, Samsung and Volvo to make 3D models of their 
products available in mobile search.
 Google also brought Google Assistant to new products. Starting at $399, the 
Pixel 3a could help the company reverse flagging sales of more premium phones.
 
 It will be available in the U.S. in T-Mobile and Sprint stores for the first 
time in addition to Verizon outlets. AT&T, the fourth major wireless carrier, 
has declined to stock it, people familiar with the matter said.
 
 Google said it would re-brand all of its "Home" hardware as "Nest," reflecting 
the thermostat maker it purchased in 2014.
 
 The Google Nest Hub Max, a larger version of Google's smart speaker with a 
display, will arrive later this year, the company announced. Priced at $229, the 
Max will include a camera with facial recognition technology to activate the 
device without a voice command.
 
 
 That camera sensing feature will not send imagery to Google's servers once it is 
set up, Google said on its new privacy website.
 
 (Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe, Dan Grebler and Susan 
Thomas)
 
				 
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