Skip to main content

Facebook will pay users $5 for their voice memo to improve speech detection

Nearly six months after Facebook admitted to listening in on its users’ audio messenger chats, the company is now offering to pay for them. 

Recommended Videos

Facebook announced Thursday it plans to pay some users up to $5 for voice memos in an effort to better develop its speech recognition technology. 

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The social media platform will slowly begin rolling out its “Pronunciations” program as part of its market research app Viewpoints, which it launched last November. The program announced today is available only to U.S.-based users 18 years and older with 75 or more Facebook friends. 

According to The Verge, users who do qualify to participate will be prompted to first say the phrase “Hey Portal” and then the name of someone from your friends list. Each statement must be recorded twice, and can include the names of up to 10 friends. 

https://twitter.com/jaypeters/status/1230583485766586368?s=20

The way it works is that once you make a recording, you get 200 points in the Viewpoints app. To cash out, you must have 1,000 points, which only adds up to $5. If you want to record yourself saying “Hey Portal” plus a friend’s name 20 times, it would probably take only a couple minutes. 

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaking on a panel at the Paley Center for Media
Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Granted, the trade isn’t necessarily balanced — not a lot of cash for a lot of private, but voluntary, data collection. 

Facebook isn’t the first tech giant to listen in on what its users are up to. Though it may be the first to pay them for their voice recordings (followed by a controversy), it’s still more than nothing. 

Nearly all the major tech companies, from Amazon to Apple and Google to Microsoft, have employed contractors to listen in on the way average people talk to and interact with their devices — making the unofficial slogan for Silicon Valley: Ask for forgiveness, not permission. 

Meira Gebel
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Meira Gebel is a freelance reporter based in Portland. She writes about tech, social media, and internet culture for Digital…
Leading Dem says Apple, Google, Facebook, and Amazon have ‘monopoly power’
rep cicilline ask zuckerberb about policing misinformation on covid 19 poster for 6176418334001

Apple, Amazon, Google, and Facebook have "monopoly power" -- and must be either regulated or broken up, according to a leading House Democrat.

In Wednesday's Big Tech antitrust hearing, the focus throughout its five-hour run time was largely on anything else other than the topic at hand.

Read more
Zuckerberg wrote Facebook can ‘just buy any competitive startups’
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote that the social media giant can "always just buy any competitive startups," according to emails obtained by Congress.

U.S. Representative Joe Neguse (D-CO) questioned Zuckerberg about his acquisitions of other companies such as WhatsApp and Instagram during Wednesday’s Big Tech hearing.

Read more
Zuckerberg to tell Congress that Instagram, WhatsApp needed Facebook to succeed
Zuckerberg Testimony Congress

Facebook founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg plans to tell Congress Wednesday in a highly anticipated antitrust hearing that Instagram and WhatsApp, both owned by the company, would not have been able to succeed without his company's resources, according to a report in CNBC.

“Facebook has made Instagram and WhatsApp successful as part of our family of apps,” Zuckerberg said in a prepared statement -- which was first obtained by The New York Times.

Read more