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5 worrisome privacy clauses hidden in smart home devices

Many of the apps and devices we use every day contain privacy terms most people never read. Yet those clauses often allow extensive data harvesting, behavioral tracking and long-term storage of personal information. Some even allow companies to access recordings or share data with partners.

The reality is simple. Smart devices inside your home and car can build detailed profiles about your daily life. Your schedule. Your habits. Even your conversations. One way I explain this to people is simple. Your phone knows where you go. Your smart home knows what you do when you get there. I unpack how this works in everyday life on my Beyond Connected podcast at getbeyondconnected.com. In many cases, these devices are not just reacting to you. They are actively logging, analyzing, and storing your behavior by default, often without you realizing it.

Let's walk through five privacy clauses that surprise most people. We will start with number five and count down to the most unsettling one.

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Today's vehicles are no longer just transportation. Many now operate as connected computers on wheels. Connected vehicle platforms and systems, such as Android Automotive OS, collect large amounts of telemetry data.

That can include:

Researchers have found that vehicles may gather dozens or even hundreds of data points during normal driving. In some cases, researchers found that vehicle speed can be logged as frequently as 25 times per second, creating a highly detailed record of how you drive.

Your car may know:

That data can be used to infer stops, turns, and even risky driving behavior. In some cases, it may also be shared with third parties for advertising, insurance, or financing purposes. In other words, your vehicle can create a detailed picture of your driving behavior and routines. Many drivers never realize how much information their car collects.

Your television may be one of the most active data collectors in your home. Many smart TVs from brands like Samsung, LG, and Roku use a technology called Automatic Content Recognition, often shortened to ACR.

ACR can analyze what appears on your screen across:

This technology works in real time, identifying what you are watching and reporting that information back to the company. Some policies even state that snippets of audio or video may be shared with third parties to match ads to your viewing. Some lawsuits have alleged that certain TVs capture screenshots extremely frequently to identify content.

Your TV can learn:

That means the show you binge, the time you watch it, and even how long you stay engaged can be packaged and sold to advertisers almost instantly. That viewing data may then be shared with advertising partners to build detailed marketing profiles.

Video doorbells are designed to increase home security. Yet they can also gather large amounts of behavioral data. Devices like the Ring Video Doorbell may automatically collect information such as:

Privacy disclosures also show that these devices can collect geolocation data, IP addresses, and details about the devices connected to your network.

Over time, a doorbell camera can build a timeline that shows:

Put together, this creates a detailed map of your daily routine, including when you are home, when you are away, and how your household operates. Individually, these signals seem harmless. Together, they can reveal detailed patterns about your household. If an account is ever compromised, that data can act as a blueprint of your life, not just a camera feed.

Some smart devices store recordings that help improve voice recognition and AI systems. Devices that may store recordings include:

Past regulatory findings have raised concerns about how companies manage that stored data. In some cases, recordings may be accessed by:

Some company disclosures state that a small number of recordings may be reviewed by research and development teams to improve products and services.

The goal of human review is often to improve voice assistants or detect errors. Still, many users never realize that recordings captured inside their homes may be reviewed by people. That means a conversation in your living room or a clip from your front door could be seen or heard by someone you have never met. Transparency about how this process works remains an ongoing discussion across the tech industry.

Voice assistants sit quietly in kitchens, bedrooms, and living rooms waiting for their wake word. Devices like the Amazon Echo process voice commands in the cloud.

According to company disclosures, voice interactions can include:

In many cases, these recordings are saved by default and can remain stored indefinitely unless you manually delete them or change your settings.

Over time, your voice assistant may accumulate years of audio interactions. That can include everything from grocery lists and song requests to conversations you did not even realize were captured. That history can reveal daily routines, requests, shopping habits, and personal questions. Most people never review or delete those recordings.

Each individual device collects only part of the picture. Together, they can reveal an astonishing amount of detail about your life. Smart devices inside your home and vehicle may capture:

Combined, this data allows companies to build extremely detailed behavioral profiles. That is why privacy experts call connected homes a data multiplier. In many cases, the value of that data is part of the business model, helping offset the cost of the devices themselves.

The good news is you still have ways to reduce how much information your devices collect. Here are a few practical steps that can make a big difference. 

Start by reviewing what access your apps have to your devices. If you use smart home apps like Ring, also check in-app privacy settings such as Control Center and turn off sharing with third parties where available.

On iPhone

Whenever possible, set location access to While Using the App rather than Always.

On Android

Settings may vary depending on your Android phone’s manufacturer

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Whenever possible, set location access to Allow only while using the app rather than Allow all the time.

Removing unnecessary permissions helps limit background tracking.

Most TVs include a setting that controls content tracking.

Look for options such as:

On Roku, go to Settings → Privacy → Smart TV Experience and disable it. On Samsung, look for Viewing Information Services and turn it off.

Turn these features off in the privacy or advertising section of your TV settings. 

Smart home devices often connect to important accounts. If attackers access those accounts, they may control cameras, speakers, or home automation systems. Use strong, unique passwords and enable two-factor authentication (2FA)  whenever available. A password manager can help generate and store secure passwords.

Next, see if your email has been exposed in past breaches. Our No. 1 password manager (see Cyberguy.com) pick includes a built-in breach scanner that checks whether your email address or passwords have appeared in known leaks. If you discover a match, immediately change any reused passwords and secure those accounts with new, unique credentials.

Check out the best expert-reviewed password managers of 2026 at Cyberguy.com.

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Dormant apps and forgotten services often keep your personal information for years.

Take time to:

Cleaning up digital clutter reduces your data footprint.

On iPhone (iOS 18 and newer)

You can also remove apps through storage settings:

Deleting the app removes it from your device and frees up storage space.

On Android (Android 14 and newer)

Settings may vary depending on your Android phone’s manufacturer

You can also remove apps through settings:

Removing unused apps helps reduce the amount of data stored on your device.

Some apps continue accessing your camera, microphone or location even when you rarely use them.

On iPhone

You can also control tracking:

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On Android

Settings may vary depending on your Android phone’s manufacturer

Android groups permissions by type so you can quickly see which apps access sensitive features.

Today's phones may automatically remove permissions from apps you have not used for a long time, but many apps still retain data tied to your account. Reviewing them manually helps reduce tracking and background data collection.

Smart speakers constantly wait for wake words like "Alexa" or "Hey Google." That means the microphone stays active so the device can detect commands. If you rarely use these features, limiting them can reduce how much audio data leaves your home. Here are some simple ways to reduce always-listening devices. 

Most smart speakers include a physical microphone mute button.

Press the mic mute button on devices like:

When muted, the device stops listening for wake words. 

Bedrooms and home offices are common places where people prefer extra privacy. If a speaker or smart display is rarely used in those rooms, unplugging it removes the microphone entirely.

Many voice assistants store past interactions. You can review and delete recordings inside the companion apps, such as:

Set recordings to auto-delete or choose not to save them at all, where that option exists. Removing stored recordings prevents them from accumulating over time.

Some smart TVs, phones and tablets include voice assistants. Look in device settings for options such as:

Turning those features off stops devices from constantly listening. Even though devices listen only for wake words, the microphones remain active. Limiting where these devices operate helps reduce the amount of audio data collected inside your home. 

Smart devices make daily life easier. They play music, answer questions, show visitors at the door and control lights with a voice command. But convenience often comes with hidden trade-offs. Many privacy clauses are buried deep in policies that most people never read. Over time, those permissions allow companies to gather enormous amounts of behavioral data. That does not mean you need to abandon smart technology. It simply means understanding what your devices collect and deciding what level of access you are comfortable with. Many of these settings are enabled by default, not because you chose them, but because you never knew they were there. A quick privacy audit today can prevent years of unnecessary data collection tomorrow. Oh, and if you want a deeper dive into how these hidden data practices affect your daily life, check out the latest episode of my Beyond Connected podcast at getbeyondconnected.com, where we break it down.

Here is a question worth asking yourself: If every smart device in your home combined its data into one timeline of your life, how comfortable would you feel with someone seeing it? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.  

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