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AppleInsider reports today that IBM has moved to bar the use of the Siri and Dictation iOS features on its internal networks, due to concerns about security. Jeanette Horan, chief information officer for IBM, told MITs Technology Review that IBM has made the move due to the fact that the spoken data is sent to Apple to be converted to text, and therefore might possibly wind up being stored on Apples servers. Horan said that after surveying several hundred employees, IBM found that many were blissfully unaware of how certain apps on their iPhones could be possible security threats. Horan went on to say that IBM is extraordinarily conservative about security, because its the nature of our business. AppleInsider adds that Apples iCloud is also banned from IBMs internal networks; IBMs employees must instead use IBMs own hosted MyMobileHub service. As AppleInsider notes though, its not just Apple products that have fallen foul of IBMs stringent security measures, as Dropbox and similar services have also been banned from the companys internal networks.
Source:
IBM bans Apple's Siri from its internal networks for security