The Show 10 goes on sale on February 25 for $249.99. Unlike previous models, this one has a swiveling screen that can track your movements, so it always will face you during video conversations. Experts say the tracking feature opens a new front for privacy invasions. “While this model includes the usual Echo-related privacy concerns (listening for its wake word, mistakenly hearing its wake word, access of recorded conversations by employees, other users possibly being able to see your conversation transcripts, and more), the Show can also track you around the room, meaning you’re never off-screen,” Chris Hauk, consumer privacy champion at Pixel Privacy, said in an email interview. “While the device does offer the traditional built-in camera shutter that is available on most Echo Show models, I’d venture to say many users do not take advantage of that feature.”

Watching You, Watching Me

A key privacy concern for the Alexa devices is making sure users know they’re listening, writes  Carla Diana in her upcoming book, My Robot Gets Me: How Social Design Can Make New Products More Human, Harvard Business Review Press (March 30, 2021).  “When summoned, it does a good job of letting people know that it’s actively listening, with a moving highlight on a glowing light ring it points in the direction of the person it’s listening to,” she writes. “When idle, however, it does a poor job of letting people know what it’s doing from a social point of view.” “The processing that powers the screen’s motion happens securely on-device, no images or videos are stored,” according to the product’s web page. “Plus, you can control your experience with motion—leave it on all the time, during select activities, turn it off entirely, or set it to move only when you explicitly ask. Asks include, ‘Alexa, stop following me’ or ‘Alexa, turn off motion.’”

Show 10 Has More Privacy, Expert Says

While the ability to follow users around the room could be problematic, privacy-wise, it can also be advantageous for many users. “I, myself, have attempted to have conversations with my in-laws, who don’t quite get the idea of staying in the frame,” Hauk said. “We have the same issues with our grandkids, who often jump out of frame. For this reason (among others), we usually conduct our video chats on our iPhone and iPad, via FaceTime. It’s easy for our kids to follow the action of our admittedly energetic grandkids.”