My friend Sara mentioned offhand that she needed to replace her kitchen faucet. She did not search for it. She did not text anyone about it. She said it out loud, in her kitchen, while her phone sat on the counter. Two hours later, a Delta faucet ad appeared in her Instagram feed.
She called me, half-laughing, half-freaked out. "My phone is definitely listening to me."
I had to tell her the truth, which turned out to be far more unsettling than the conspiracy theory she already believed.
The Listening Thing Is Real — But Overblown
Your phone almost certainly is not recording your faucet conversations and shipping them to a marketing team. The data bandwidth alone makes it technically implausible — a phone continuously streaming audio would drain your battery in hours and spike your data usage in ways security researchers would have detected long ago.
But in late 2023, something interesting slipped out. A marketing team within media giant Cox Media Group claimed it had the capability to listen to ambient conversations through embedded microphones in smartphones, smart TVs, and other devices to gather data for targeted advertising, in a program it called "Active Listening." Google, Meta, and Amazon all publicly distanced themselves from CMG. The pitch materials were quietly deleted.
Whether or not CMG's "Active Listening" product actually worked as advertised is almost beside the point. What matters is what their pitch revealed about the appetite in the advertising industry for this kind of access — and why they thought they could get away with calling it legal.
CMG claimed in their since-deleted blog post that active listening is legal because users agree to it in the fine print of app terms of service. Think about that. The consent you gave to a weather app or a free flashlight utility may have included a clause permitting someone to listen to you in your kitchen.
The Thing That Is Actually Terrifying
Here is what the faucet story gets wrong: Sara's phone did not need to hear her say "faucet." It already knew.
It knew she had been spending more time at home than usual. It knew her neighborhood, her income bracket, the age of her house based on her GPS history. It knew she had been visiting home improvement websites — maybe she searched for grout cleaner three weeks ago, and that data got combined with her location patterns and her demographic profile and her household composition, and an algorithm concluded she was in a home-maintenance mindset.
This is what the data broker industry actually does, and it is vastly more sophisticated and invasive than a microphone.
Data broker companies Gravy Analytics and Venntel claimed to collect and process more than 17 billion location signals from around a billion mobile devices every single day. That is not a typo. Seventeen billion. Daily. And that data — which tracked people to medical clinics, places of religious worship, domestic abuse shelters, and political rallies — was then sold to advertisers, analytics firms, and private government contractors.
The Federal Trade Commission took action against both companies in December 2024, as well as against another data broker, Mobilewalla. The FTC's complaint alleged that Mobilewalla collected more than 500 million unique consumer advertising identifiers paired with precise location data, which was not anonymized — and the company sold that raw data to third parties including advertisers, other data brokers, and analytics firms.
Nobody told you this was happening. You did not consent to it in any meaningful way. It was buried in the terms of a random app you installed in 2019 and forgot about.
The Counterintuitive Part Most Articles Miss
Everyone focuses on the microphone. Nobody talks about the real-time bidding system.
Every time a webpage or app loads an ad, there is a tiny auction happening in milliseconds. Publishers send your device information — including your location, browsing behavior, and device identifiers — to hundreds of potential advertisers so they can bid to show you an ad. It is called real-time bidding, and here is the part that should genuinely disturb you: companies can participate in those auctions, lose the bid, and still keep your data.
According to the FTC, there are few if any technical controls in place to ensure that advertisers who are bidding do not retain data in unintended ways — and the FTC found that Mobilewalla retained data from auctions it did not even win, which is prohibited by RTB exchange rules.
So the moment a webpage loads on your phone, your location data can be harvested by dozens of companies you have never heard of, who were not even the ones showing you the ad. This happens thousands of times a day.
That is why Sara saw the faucet ad. Not because anyone was listening. Because the surveillance infrastructure already knew everything it needed to know.
What You Can Actually Do
This is where most articles hand you a list of generic tips. I will skip that and tell you what actually matters.
Reset your advertising ID. Both iPhone and Android assign your phone a unique advertising identifier that data brokers use to track you across apps and websites. On iPhone, go to Settings → Privacy & Security → Tracking, turn off "Allow Apps to Request to Track," and under Apple Advertising turn off "Personalized Ads." On Android (settings vary by manufacturer), find "Ads" in your settings and reset the advertising ID, or on Android 12 and later, delete it entirely. This does not stop all tracking, but it severs the thread that ties your data across brokers.
Audit your location permissions. Go into your app permissions right now and check which apps have "Always On" location access. Most of them do not need it. Change anything non-essential to "While Using" or "Never." The weather app does not need to know where you are at 3am.
Use a browser that does not participate in real-time bidding. Firefox with the uBlock Origin extension blocks a significant portion of the RTB ecosystem. Safari has decent tracking protection built in. Chrome is made by the world's largest advertising company — draw your own conclusions.
Submit data broker opt-out requests. Services like DeleteMe or Privacy Bee automate this for a fee. If you want to do it manually, the major brokers — Acxiom, LexisNexis, Spokeo, and others — each have opt-out pages. It is tedious, requires verification, and they will often relist you after some time. But reducing your data broker profile does reduce the richness of your surveillance dossier.
Be skeptical of free apps. If an app is free and does not have an obvious business model, the product is you. A flashlight app that asks for microphone and location access is not a flashlight app.
The Honest Limitation
None of this will make you invisible. The data broker industry processes hundreds of billions of data points daily, and even if you opt out of every broker you can find, your data has already been bought, sold, aggregated, and resold multiple times. The FTC's enforcement actions against Gravy Analytics, Mobilewalla, and others are meaningful, but they are playing catch-up to an industry that has had a decade of unchecked growth.
You can make yourself a harder target. You cannot make yourself invisible. The infrastructure for this kind of mass surveillance was built quietly, it was funded by advertising dollars, and most of it was technically legal the whole time.
That is the part that should keep you up at night — not the microphone.
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