Hah. Here's something funny to try. On your phone, start a comment, and using the predictive text feature (assuming your phone does that), keep clicking on the middle word.
Mine went like this:
Thanks for the update and for the record I have a new phone and I don't want to be a part of the team and I will be there at the same time I don't have a new phone and I will be there at the same time I don't have a new phone and I will be there at the same time
Alternately, you can randomly hit any of the suggested words each time, or hit them in a certain pattern, and see what comes out.
Mine went like this:
Thanks for the update and for the record I have a new phone and I don't want to be a part of the team and I will be there at the same time I don't have a new phone and I will be there at the same time I don't have a new phone and I will be there at the same time
Alternately, you can randomly hit any of the suggested words each time, or hit them in a certain pattern, and see what comes out.
no subject
Date: 2018-04-02 04:35 pm (UTC)From:It looks like predictive text (which is those personalized suggestions, as well as possibly Android's text correction) does use a cloud service and a stored user dictionary to work at all. As you point out, this is awful for privacy.
I've opted to keep mine on despite the privacy awful, but if someone were, say, using E2E messaging services, it would be a useful side channel to pursue their predictive text entries instead of trying to take on WhatsApp or Signal head on.