
The Zoom hack that says, ‘Don’t record me’
Quick Answer
VC Jeremy Levine has adopted a unique Zoom identity, stating 'I do not consent to transcribing or recording,' highlighting concerns over the growing prevalence of AI transcription apps that threaten spontaneous conversations.
Quick Take
VC Jeremy Levine has adopted a unique Zoom identity, stating 'I do not consent to transcribing or recording,' highlighting concerns over the growing prevalence of AI transcription apps that threaten spontaneous conversations. The trend raises legal and practical questions about the utility of recorded interactions, as many assume meetings will be recorded, impacting personal and professional dynamics.
Key Points
- Jeremy Levine's Zoom identity reflects concerns over AI transcription apps.
- Many assume meetings will be recorded, impacting conversation dynamics.
- The trend raises legal issues regarding consent and privacy.
- AI apps like Granola are used for recording personal interactions.
- There are questions about the usefulness of excessive recorded content.
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~2 min readIn Brief
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VC Jeremy Levine has a wry solution to something that routinely annoys him, according to a new Wall Street Journal article on the rise of AI transcription apps. On Zoom, he is no longer “Jeremy Levine” but instead “Jeremy Levine I do not consent to transcribing or recording.”
It may sound petty or brilliant, depending on your point of view, but what’s clear is that always-on recording is becoming ubiquitous, thanks to a growing crop of AI note-taking apps and devices, many of which we’ve covered here at TechCrunch (we’ve even ranked some).
VC Eric Bahn tells the outlet he now automatically assumes his meetings with founders will be recorded, even before he sees a phone slide across a conference table. One founder tells the WSJ she records most of her first dates with the Granola app, then feeds the transcript to Claude afterward to see if she could be more “engaging or empathetic,” while also assessing who did most of the talking.
Levine calls the whole trend “socially unacceptable behavior” that can completely kill spontaneous conversations. Others in the piece note it’s a legal minefield.
But there’s another wrinkle: if every meeting, watercooler conversation, and romantic outing gets transcribed and summarized, who’s actually reading any of it? At what point does this audio landfill of every conversation stop being useful and just become another recording no one has time to play back?
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