Facebook Is Hoping You�ll Invite �Big Brother� into Your Home
Facebook developing �Portal� gadget which will let it put microphones and cameras in
people�s homes
by Jasper Hamill
In George Orwell�s 1984, the oppressive rulers of Oceania use devices called telescreens
to closely monitor and repress citizens.
Now Facebook looks set to follow in the Party�s footsteps by putting its own firm�s microphones
and cameras into people�s homes.
The social network is planning to release its first ever piece of consumer hardware
which will be called Portal and cost a whopping $499 (�368), a website called Cheddar has
claimed.
The device will feature a 15inch screen, a wide-angle camera with facial recognition
and microphones to allow voice control.
It�s expected to use facial recognition to allow people to log into their accounts
without having to type in passwords and will be dedicated to video chat.
The gadget has been designed by a shadowy Facebook department called Building 8 that�s
also working on mind-reading technology.
�Rather than position the device as a smart assistant akin to Amazon�s Echo speakers,
Facebook intends to pitch Portal as a way for families and friends to stay connected
through video chatting and other social features,� the website wrote.
�Facebook plans a formal product introduction in early May at its annual developer conference
and hopes to ship the device in the second half of 2018.�
Apart from the potentially grave privacy implications of letting Facebook�s cameras and microphones
into your home, there�s another clear fault with the gadget: it costs almost as much as
an iPhone or iPad but probably does a lot less.
Although Facebook has not officially commented, Andrew Bosworth, the company�s vice president
of augmented and virtual reality, wrote on Twitter: �Can�t comment on speculation
but can confirm it�s going to be an exciting year for AR/VR�.
Building 8 is a top secret Facebook division which used to be headed up by Regina E. Dugan,
former boss of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), which is dedicated to military
research.
Last year, Facebook admitted its own research wing was working on technology which can read
people�s minds at 100 words per minute.
Will Big Zucker end up watching us all?
EXCLUSIVE: Facebook Dives into Home Device Market with Video Chat Product Named �Portal�
Facebook is about to jump into the consumer hardware business in a big way with a video
chat device named �Portal,� which will put it in direct competition with Amazon�s
hugely popular line of Echo voice-controlled devices, Cheddar has learned.
The device is designed to work in the home and represents Facebook�s first serious
foray into selling consumer hardware, people familiar with the matter said.
Rather than position the device as a smart assistant akin to Amazon�s Echo speakers,
Facebook intends to pitch Portal as a way for families and friends to stay connected
through video chatting and other social features.
Facebook plans a formal product introduction in early May at its annual developer conference
and hopes to ship the device in the second half of 2018.
Like Amazon�s screen-equipped Echo Show, Facebook�s Portal is designed to work indoors
and be controlled through voice commands.
According to people familiar with Facebook�s plans, Portal will be equipped with a wide-angle
lens that is capable of recognizing individual faces and associating them with their Facebook
accounts.
The world�s largest social network has been using facial recognition for years and recently
started notifying users if their faces appear in photos they aren�t tagged in.
Facebook also intends to let Portal access outside streaming services like Spotify and
Netflix.
The company recently signed sweeping music licensing deals with Sony/ATV and Universal
Music Group.
A Facebook spokesperson declined to comment for this story.
Portal will be the first product to emerge from Facebook�s troubled consumer hardware
lab, Building 8.
Regina Dugan, the former Google and DARPA exec Facebook hired to lead the division,
suddenly departed last year after 18 months on the job.
Her exit came as numerous other high-level staffers left the division in 2017.
Veteran Facebook ad exec Andrew Bosworth was appointed last summer to lead all of the company�s
hardware efforts, including its separate Oculus virtual reality business.
With Building 8, Facebook hopes to eventually sell a suite of consumer products that can
compete with offerings from the likes of Amazon, Google, and Apple.
Facebook employees have internally referred to the video chat device with the codename
�Aloha� but recently settled on the name Portal � an indication that product development
has progressed even as there�s been turnover in Building 8�s upper ranks.
Facebook is currently planning to price Portal at $499 but could decide to lower the price
to further spur consumer adoption.
(Amazon, by contrast, sells the Echo Show for $230.)
CEO Mark Zuckerberg has told employees that he doesn�t care if the device generates
profit but rather wants it to change user behavior and encourage phone-like usage among
owners.
Portal will be sold by Facebook through pop-up stores and online, people familiar with the
matter said.
Facebook�s Oculus VR division is separately planning to release a cheaper standalone headset
called Oculus Go this year.


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