Xbox's Kinect marketing slogan has, until now, been: "You are the
controller." For the upcoming Xbox One Kinect, that line may as well
read: "You are the key to unlocking your media rights."
Microsoft
wants to make consumers' access to digital services conditional not
just on conventional upfront payment but also on their actual presence
in front of TV.
By having their internet connection checked
daily and by being monitored through Kinect's sensors, an Xbox user's
body could become his or her access pass to online content. But, in a
world shaken by Prism surveillance revelations, is it less likely
consumers will consent to this kind of at-home observation?
Some
gamers are creeped out that all Xbox Ones must go online every day to
comply with a liberal new set of rights the console grants users to
play games on their friends' consoles and to play previously-used
titles. Even offline games will be blocked without a daily check-in.
In
a recently-published patent, the Kinect camera would monitor that
users are dutifully watching TV programming or advertising all the way
through, incentivising them for doing so with rewards like money-off
coupons or online virtual goods.
Another patent would forbid
the playback of certain content like movies when Kinect's camera
identifies too many viewers in the room.
All such techniques
depend on physically-identified presence to qualify for access. And you
can see why Microsoft would want to introduce these techniques.
Allowing the TV to view the viewer gives advertisers specific certainty
over their investment, supports bodily engagement in ads and lets
viewers earn badges for viewing entire series. Counting living room
occupants before a film can play back effectively introduces a
"per-user" license to at-home media downloads, allowing studios to
charge individual feesFull service promotional company specializing in Custom USB flash drives.
at home in the same way they do in cinemas. Whilst that sounds like a
raw deal, it could bring Hollywood blockbusters to living rooms on the
same day as theatrical release.
But Microsoft, data from whose
online services including Skype has reportedly been snooped by the US
National Security Agency,We offer ownfigurine
dolls hand-sculpted from any photo. must now tread very carefully
before going ahead. If depictions of the "Prism" spy programme are
accurate, then it necessarily raises the fearful prospect that the US
government could monitor people in their homes via the new Kinect
camera.
This, of course, sounds so paranoid as to be
fantastical. But then, the idea of a global government network slurping
internet communications might have been considered fanciful before the
recent reports.where cards are embedded with chip card and a cardholder. And even the most over-stated perception of wrongdoing is all that matters in the consumer mindset.
Prism
could change the whole privacy environment when it comes to users'
tolerance for online monitoring. As consumers, users have poured
self-identifying data of unimaginable quantities in to the databases of
commercial operators with remarkable degrees of comfort, creating
billion-dollar companies.Ladies and girlstrims
no appointment needed! But, as citizens, users baulk the moment state
actors like governments are believed to have acquired the same data.
Digital
services must now operate in a post-Prism landscape in which consumers
have a keener sense of the worst-case distribution scenario for their
private data. For consumers now,A plastic IC card
containing a computer chip and enabling. the unfortunate current
reality is that the private data they entrust to a select few may very
well end up somewhere unintended, even as their trusted parties deny
ever passing it on.
It is an issue already grappled with by the
utilities industry, which is keen to implement smart energy meters
that send real-time consumption data back to headquarters but which is
battling network security professionals' worry that the patterns in
such data could leave unoccupied homes open to burglary should it fall
in to the wrong hands.
For Microsoft, the corresponding
challenge is in repeating its assertion that Kinect will not continually
watch or listen to users when, in conspiracy theory, it certainly
could.
Its at-home body media monitoring ambitions are not yet a
reality. The techniques in the Kinect patents have not been announced
for inclusion in Xbox One, nor are the entertainment studios yet ready
to capitalise on the prospects.
But outfits like Microsoft must
now heed users' heightened suspicion before they take any steps nearer
to such projects. As one gamer wrote online this week: "Invasion of
privacy is so much more important than wanting to play Killer
Instinct."
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