For instance, the device could whisper in your ear to remind you of the name of a business acquaintance you met two weeks ago. It could respond to a simple voice command and tell you whether the part your customer needs is in stock, or it could turn a colleague's instant message into an audible answer to an important question during a client meeting. It will even use global positioning system technology to detect that you're driving past a grocery story and tell you that you may want to stop and pick up a chocolate cake for that holiday party. The prototype, as it stands, is powered by a 400-MHz Pentium chip, 1-Gbyte hard drive, and 256 Mbytes of RAM and uses off-the shelf applications. Accenture research associates Owen Richter and Dana Le say their work centers on how to incorporate the collection of available technology into a business setting and possibly land an integration job with one of the consulting firms' huge clients, or even spin the technology off into its own business.
Naturally, the implications are disturbing to privacy advocates. Chris Hoofnagle, legislative counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center, says some states have laws prohibiting the recording of a conversation without notifying the person being recorded. Accenture has addressed this by having a red indicator light visible on the microphone of the device as it's recording, but whether that qualifies as notification may ultimately be a matter for the courts to decide, Hoofnagle says. Whatever the case, he doubts that citizens will embrace the idea of being constantly recorded by each other: "There could be a strong backlash against this type of monitoring."
Richter says part of the development project is to identify appropriate uses of the technology and determine whether the practical benefits outweigh the privacy concerns. Eventually, he expects an etiquette to develop around wearable technologies such as the PAA, much as they have around the cell phone. But he also acknowledges that users of the device will have a certain responsibility to those they record. "You'll have to be very explicit about how you use it," Richter says. He says real-world applications of the PAA are still three to five years away.
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