Sound of Surveillance: Speculative Futures for Voice Data in India

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Voice-activated technology embodies India's ongoing negotiation between the promise of empowerment and the spectre of surveillance. Building upon the paper's dialectic, progress versus risk, and the search for ethical synthesis, this analysis offers an integrated examination of the voice interaction data lifecycle, drawing in the realities of India's socio-cultural and regulatory frameworks. Moving well beyond traditional legal compliance, it proposes contextually attuned, speculative design interventions, and situates these within broader debates about universal versus contextual privacy models in the era of AI-driven voice ecosystems.Based on a comprehensive survey of 500 respondents across urban and semi-urban India, this study reveals profound contradictions in user behavior: while 76% remain unaware of voiceprints as biometric identifiers, they continue engaging with voice technologies that unknowingly create these digital fingerprints. The research identifies four critical tension points,the unacknowledged biometric, the convenience paradox, the lingual gap, and task-specific utility versus broad integration,that illuminate the complex relationship between technological adoption and privacy awareness in contemporary India.

Article activity feed