Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

  • Advertisements

Horizons

IBM bans Siri – and probably for good reason (+video)

IBM bans Siri over security concerns, according to a new report. Behind IBM ban: Siri queries are stored in unknown place and manner.

By Matthew Shaer / May 24, 2012

A user accesses Siri on his Apple iPhone 4S.

Reuters

Enlarge

Siri: Beloved by Zooey Deschanel and John Malkovich. Not so beloved by IBM

Skip to next paragraph

Recent posts

Apple stores and uses data in a way that's not completely transparent.

In an interview with MIT's Technology Review, IBM CIO Jeanette Horan revealed that Siri, Apple's voice-activated personal assistant app, is banned on IBM-issued iPhones. The reason IBM bans Siri? The company has no control over where or how the spoken queries are stored. "We're just extraordinarily conservative," Horan told a reporter with the Technology Review. "It's the nature of our business."

Also banned, according to the Review: iCloud, Apple's file-storage system. IBM employees, the Technology Review reports, "use an IBM-hosted version called MyMobileHub." 

The Siri brouhaha has received a good deal of buzz this week, although as Ars Technica staffer Jacqui Cheng notes, the move by IBM is not particularly shocking. "Apple doesn't make it clear whether it stores that data," she writes, "for how long, or who has access to it" – a bright red flag for any organization concerned about maintaining control over trade secrets. In fact, Cheng continues, what is truly surprising is that the ban is not more widespread. 

"It appears that not many companies have joined IBM in forbidding the use of Siri for security purposes," she writes. "I asked on Twitter whether anyone else's companies have a similar policy, and received extremely few responses saying yes. The only people—so far—who have acknowledged any kind of Siri policy were government workers and some school employees. Most said their employers had not yet added Siri to their list of forbidden technologies."

It's worth noting here that with the rise of "bring your own device" policies – BYOD, for short – we'll likely see a whole lot more of this kind of kerfuffle. 

For more tech news, follow us on Twitter @venturenaut

Permissions

Read Comments

View reader comments | Comment on this story

  • Weekly review of global news and ideas
  • Balanced, insightful and trustworthy
  • Subscribe in print or digital

Special Offer

 

Doing Good

 

What happens when ordinary people decide to pay it forward? Extraordinary change...

Scott Budnick works in the dining room as customers arrive for a free meal at the Mathewson Street Friendship Breakfast in Providence, R.I.

Scott Budnick serves breakfast – with a side order of respect – to the homeless

Sunday breakfast at a Providence, R.I., church is more than a free meal. Half the volunteers are homeless themselves: 'It's their [own] breakfast that they're putting on.'

 
 
Become a fan! Follow us! Google+ YouTube See our feeds!