iOS 15.4 beta patches bug that shared Siri recordings even after opt-out
When you upgrade your iPhone to iOS 15.4 (currently in beta) you’ll be greeted by a screen asking if you want to share recordings of your Siri requests with Apple to help improve the service. The recordings are pseudonymized so they can’t be associated with you specifically, but they’ll be heard by Apple employees who will use them to help make Siri better understand what you say and what you mean.
But…didn’t you already do this years ago? Yes, and if you’ve had your iPhone for a long time you may be wondering what has changed. Why are you being asked this again?
In short, it’s because Apple fixed a bug in iOS 15. The initial iOS 15 release had a bug that caused Siri recordings to be shared with Apple even if the user had opted out—it only affected “a small number of users,” according to Apple.
When Apple discovered the bug, it turned off the feature for many users in iOS 15.2 and set about deleting all the requests that had been inadvertently recorded.
As of iOS 15.4 (beta 2), the bug has been fixed. But in order to roll out the fixed code, Apple needs to ask everyone again if they want to share their Siri recordings with Apple.
If you choose to share them, the recording of everything you say immediately after “Hey Siri” (or when you hold the side button on your iPhone) will be sent to Apple and may be used by teams who review and tag these requests to help improve Siri’s speech recognition and language understanding. All personal info is stripped from the recordings—it is associated with a unique randomized device ID that is not associated with your name, email address, Apple ID, or any other data Apple has about you.
If you choose not to share them, Siri recordings will never leave your device. Should you change your mind, you can change your response to opt-in or opt-out at any time but opening Settings > Privacy > Analytics & Improvements and flipping the Improve Siri & Dictation toggle.
I have written professionally about technology for my entire adult professional life – over 20 years. I like to figure out how complicated technology works and explain it in a way anyone can understand.
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