Skip to main content

Google’s new privacy update lets you delete Assistant’s voice command history

Google announced new privacy updates on Wednesday that include the ability to delete Google Assistant history and the addition of incognito mode in Google Maps. 

In a blog post, Eric Miraglia, director of Product Management, Privacy and Data Protection Office at Google, wrote about the updates that expand current privacy features to more apps and tools. 

Recommended Videos

One of them is being able to delete your Assistant history. By saying things like “Hey Google, delete the last thing I said to you” or “Hey Google, delete everything I said to you last week,” the Assistant will delete your voice command history. It’ll delete your history automatically, but if you want to delete your voice command history from more than a week ago, you’ll be directed to your account settings. The new update will roll out next week for English and next month for all other languages. 

Another update is incognito mode, which was added to YouTube earlier this year. You can now use incognito mode on Google Maps, which means the places you search for won’t be saved onto your account. The feature will be added to Google Maps on Android later this month and onto iOS “soon.” 

A new tool called Password Checkup will also further protect your different passwords across various accounts by letting you know if a password is weak or if it’s already in use for an account.

Google said the updates would help keep security and privacy expectations clear as technology evolves, especially in the voice assistant realm. As more companies are offering voice assistants, the question of privacy has come into play about who is listening in on your voice assistant conversations. 

Google reportedly used third-party contractors to transcribe Google Assistant commands, according to a July report by Belgian’s VRT NWS. In September, Google confirmed to ArsTechnica that it paused the reviews of Google Assistant globally.

Other voice assistants like Amazon’s Alexa are now being more transparent with the voice- recording process and allowing people to opt out of having their voice recordings transcribed by humans. 

Amazon released similar privacy updates to its Alexa voice assistant a few months ago that let people delete their Amazon Alexa recordings. Last week, Amazon added more Alexa privacy features to provide better transparency to its users in how it answers your questions. Updates to Alexa included the addition of “Alexa, tell me what you heard,” and “Alexa, why did you do that?”

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Your Google One plan just got 2 big security updates to keep you safe online
Two Google Pixel 7 Pro smartphones.

Google just added some major new security features to keep its Google One subscribers safe while on the web. After all, the internet is where you spend a lot of your time, whether that's looking things up, paying bills, shopping, booking appointments, or sharing photos with family and friends. That’s a lot of information, and Google wants to keep subscribers safe from the darker side of the web.

Regardless of whether you use an iPhone or an Android smartphone, all Google One subscribers are getting the following two security features.
VPN by Google One for everyone

Read more
Google just announced 9 new features for your Android phone and watch
Samsung Galaxy S23 showing Google Photos

Google has announced some big new features coming to Android and Wear OS devices during the Mobile World Congress 2023 event in Barcelona, Spain. These new features are beginning to roll out starting today, February 27, with others to come later.
New Android features available starting February 27

Google Drive users will now be able to do freehand annotation on Android phones and tablets. This means you are now able to use a stylus or your fingers to annotate PDFs directly in the Google Drive app on Android.

Read more
Google Chrome is getting the Android tablet update you’ve been waiting for
Google Chrome app on s8 screen.

Google today announced the release of its redesign for the Chrome app on Android tablets. After long being neglected on the big screen, especially in comparison to Apple's or Samsung's browsers, Google says it'll be rebuilding the browser to help you get work done faster with a tablet or other large-screened device.

These updates can be broken down into design and functionality improvements, and we'll be kicking things off with the redesign. The first change adds a new side-by-side design when using Chrome paired with another app. This comes with an auto-scroll back feature so you can swipe between tabs, hiding the close buttons when your tabs are too small to prevent mis-taps — plus the inclusion of a restore feature.

Read more