2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhcs.2021.102604
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Meet Malexa, Alexa’s malicious twin: Malware-induced misperception through intelligent voice assistants

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Cited by 14 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…It is interesting to note that absence of explicit information about the administration of COVID-19 to children made both the conservative-and liberal-leaning participant express a more hesitant position to child vaccination for COVID-19. V. DISCUSSION Consistent with the previous evidence on inducing misperceptions with a third-party malicious Alexa skill [14], we found that the aspects of the COVID-19 vaccine that involve an external entity, the government or the vaccine manufacturers, were the aspects where users could be misled to ignore otherwise valid information. For the aspects where hard evidence about the vaccines hasn't changed during the study -safety, side effects, and reported efficacy -Alexa wasn't able to dispel any biases that were rooted in personal beliefs [38].…”
Section: Misperceptions and Political Leaningssupporting
confidence: 89%
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“…It is interesting to note that absence of explicit information about the administration of COVID-19 to children made both the conservative-and liberal-leaning participant express a more hesitant position to child vaccination for COVID-19. V. DISCUSSION Consistent with the previous evidence on inducing misperceptions with a third-party malicious Alexa skill [14], we found that the aspects of the COVID-19 vaccine that involve an external entity, the government or the vaccine manufacturers, were the aspects where users could be misled to ignore otherwise valid information. For the aspects where hard evidence about the vaccines hasn't changed during the study -safety, side effects, and reported efficacy -Alexa wasn't able to dispel any biases that were rooted in personal beliefs [38].…”
Section: Misperceptions and Political Leaningssupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Malware-induced misperceptions are a fairly new concept that targets the integrity of the content communicated online. The authors in [14] found that a malicious third-party skill for Alexa could successfully warp the perceptions regarding government action by rephrasing regulatory bulletins. Replacing formal language with every-day vernacular ("fine" rephrased as "slap on the wrist") and keeping the facts intact, the skill was able to present the government as pro-business when it comes to workplace safety regulations, contrary to its original pro-workers position.…”
Section: A Covid-19 Vaccine Perceptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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