Sonos One

Sonos One

Sonos
Wi-Fi

Review date: Nov. 8, 2021

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Mozilla says

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People voted: Somewhat creepy

Sonos One takes the sound quality of Sonos speakers and adds in voice control via Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant for a smart speaker that sounds smart too. Play music, set alarms, ask questions, get answers, pretend like you don't live alone, all with this humidity resistant little speaker that won't freak out during a hot shower in your bathroom. It's not the cheapest smart speaker on the market, but audiophiles will likely approve.

What could happen if something goes wrong?

Sonos does a decent job with privacy and security as a whole. They say they do not and will not sell personal information about their customers, which, yay! Still, with Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant built in, know that those voice requests to Alexa or Google Assistant are sent to Amazon and Google even if Sonos doesn't hang on to any of your voice recordings. Amazon and Google will collect data on you from those voice requests. Sonos did have a small privacy goof early in 2020 when they sent an email to 450 customers and revealed all of their email addresses to each other. To be fair, we've all probably made a mistake like that so we'll cut them a little slack. One more thing. If you decide to use Sonos Radio, a $7.99 subscription service that plays you curated music and lets you tune into over 60,000 radio stations around the world, Sonos will share some anonymized data with third party advertisers for internet based ads. This isn't a huge deal though, so we're not too worried about it.

Tips to protect yourself

  • If you are using Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant, adjust the respective privacy settings of the service.
  • mobile

Can it snoop on me? information

Camera

Device: No

App: No

Microphone

Device: Yes

App: Yes

Tracks location

Device: No

App: Yes

What can be used to sign up?

What data does the company collect?

How does the company use this data?

According to Sonos, it does not and will not sell personal information about its customers. Sonos does not use information that personally identifies you to display interest-based ads.

If you decide to use Sonos Radio, they will share a subset of your de-identified and anonymized data with third party advertising companies to present, via Sonos Products, interest-based ads. Specifically, they share the following information with advertising partners: location, language, and genre of the station you are currently listening to.

How can you control your data?

Sonos promises to delete data as soon as it is no longer needed for purposes such as having a customer relationship. Unfortunately, no clear retention details are stated. If there is any personal data that, for technical reasons, Sonos is unable to delete entirely from their systems, Sonos will implement appropriate measures to prevent any further processing or use of such data.

What is the company’s known track record of protecting users’ data?

Average

An email sent by Sonos to 450 customers revealed all of their email addresses to each other in January 2020. In 2017, a security vulnerability left some Sonos speakers vulnerable.

Can this product be used offline?

No

User-friendly privacy information?

No

Links to privacy information

Does this product meet our Minimum Security Standards? information

Yes

Encryption

Yes

Uses encryption in transit and at rest.

Strong password

Yes

Security updates

Yes

Automatic updates are enabled by default.

Manages vulnerabilities

Yes

Sonos does not have an official bug bounty program, but invites responsible disclosure of security bugs.

Privacy policy

Yes

Does the product use AI? information

Yes

Sonos relies on speech recognition technology from Amazon or Google.

Is this AI untrustworthy?

Can’t Determine

What kind of decisions does the AI make about you or for you?

Is the company transparent about how the AI works?

N/A

Does the user have control over the AI features?

Yes

*Privacy Not Included

Dive Deeper

  • A Sonos survey suggests the company might build a voice assistant of its own
    The Verge Link opens in a new tab

Comments

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