Users reported that their Google Home Mini device turns on and off automatically thousands of time every day, sending in the logs of what they hear around them to Google.
The Problem
Reportedly, the Google Home Mini is sending data to “com.google.android.apps.chirp/mushroom/prod” and Assistant. What is interesting here is ‘chirp’ is the code-name given to the Google Home ecosystem, and ‘mushroom’ is the code-name for the mini. All the conversations sent by Google Home Mini to Google were available on My Activity log with a play button available. This is scary, if you think of it. A machine in your room that listens to everything that you speak and sends it across to an organization. However, when the issue was reported, Google was quick to respond. This issue was reported by Android Police’s Artem.
The Cause
Google sent over a PR Team to Artem’s home to collect his Google Home Mini and examine it. An engineer drove up to Oakland the same night to look at it – Google was serious at fixing this major privacy violation. Google found out that this was happening because of the Google Home Mini registering a phantom touch on its top. When you touch the device for a couple of seconds, it automatically triggers the assistant. Some devices were automatically being triggered without the touch. This was causing it to ‘spy’ on users and was totally unintentional.
The Fix
Google released a software update which bumps the firmware version of the Google Home Mini from version 1.28.99351 to version 1.28.100122. This issue, while it seems really serious, isn’t intentional. Google came clear when they said that this problem exists on only about 4000 devices – the ones which were given out during the Made By Google event or the ones as well as the ones given on donut pop-up events. Moreover, Google has also removed all activity recorded by long-pressing the Google Home Mini from their servers for all users! Source: Android Police