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Myth or reality? Start recording a conversation by keyword?
Increasingly, I hear that OPSOS or ATS or some other structures have the ability to record conversations when they hear a key word in a conversation. I myself have little idea of ​​\u200b\u200bwhat power should be in order to filter out all conversations, record the necessary ones, and even recognize people's speech. Therefore, it seems to me completely unrealistic, and I think that it is a myth. What do you think?
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As a person who developed the telephone SORM, I declare that this is complete nonsense. There is no such automation, and cannot be, at current capacities.
I think that all the conversations of people who, for some reason, are of interest to the services, are recorded.
Subsequently (for example, a criminal case has begun or compromising evidence is needed), the recordings can be picked up, listened to and decrypted by animated employees.
The greatest progress in the field of "industrial" voice recognition was achieved by Google - they have a standard chip in Google Voice - decoding the answering machine. I practically don’t use Google Voice, call forwarding is not set up, and all incoming calls go to an answering machine, and mostly advertising robots call with an offer to refinance my mortgage :) So, for the few years that I have Google Voice, he has NEVER been able to 100% correctly decrypt messages on the answering machine. Draw your own conclusions.
Considering that they learned to extract keywords and phrases from the SIP stream, why not?
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