As noted by Android Police, the feature sends “up to 20 previous messages” to Google’s servers to generate the same AI suggestions, even with end-to-end encryption (E2EE) enabled via RCS.
Google agrees to these terms on the Magic Compose support page and explains that it collects these messages, including emoji, reactions, and URLs, to train artificial intelligence to create appropriate responses. Captions and audio transcripts can be sent, while attachments, audio messages, and pictures are not sent.
Despite Google’s claims, privacy concerns persist.
Source: Ferra
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