Edward Snowden is well-known as a whistleblower and is firmly against spying of any kind, which is why he is now wanted by the U.S. government. Recently he commented on the new messenger offering by Google called “Allo,” saying that people should not use it. According to him, the app is a privacy threat masquerading as a revolutionary AI-driven chat service.
Google “Allo” is a new messaging service that that the tech company is marketing as a complete game changer, Tech Times reports. Powered by artificial intelligence, the messaging app also offers new features that are supposed to be innovative tricks but can actually present problems when it comes to matters of privacy.
For one thing, the app is meant to collect data from conversations, which Google will then feed into the AI that’s powering the messaging service. This is how the AI is supposed to learn and evolve to customize the experience of users, much like what it’s doing with search histories and even Gmail messages.
Unfortunately, this also means that everything users type into the chat boxes will be recorded and stored. No matter what Google might say to try to justify such behavior, there’s no denying that collecting private communications is a violation of their users’ privacy.
The press did not exactly take to the messaging service, however, which should help in minimizing the number of users willing to try “Allo.” As Fortune notes, many thought that it was simply a curiosity while others went so far as to say that it was unremarkable.
What has privacy advocates really riled up about the setup of the app is how easily it can make the information available to government agencies. Snowden Tweeted that police can just ask for the information gathered from suspects and it’s more than possible that Google would be forced to give it to them.
What is #Allo? A Google app that records every message you ever send and makes it available to police upon request. https://t.co/EdPRC0G7Py
— Edward Snowden (@Snowden) September 21, 2016
One piece of good news, however, is the “incognito mode” that users could activate while using the app, which fans of Google Chrome will most likely be familiar with by now. Even so, the thought of having all conversations tracked and stored on Google’s servers is a troubling one.


SpaceX Reports $8 Billion Profit as IPO Plans and Starlink Growth Fuel Valuation Buzz
Sony Q3 Profit Jumps on Gaming and Image Sensors, Full-Year Outlook Raised
Elon Musk’s Empire: SpaceX, Tesla, and xAI Merger Talks Spark Investor Debate
Tencent Shares Slide After WeChat Restricts YuanBao AI Promotional Links
SoftBank and Intel Partner to Develop Next-Generation Memory Chips for AI Data Centers
Amazon Stock Rebounds After Earnings as $200B Capex Plan Sparks AI Spending Debate
Sam Altman Reaffirms OpenAI’s Long-Term Commitment to NVIDIA Amid Chip Report
Anthropic Eyes $350 Billion Valuation as AI Funding and Share Sale Accelerate
Nvidia Confirms Major OpenAI Investment Amid AI Funding Race
AMD Shares Slide Despite Earnings Beat as Cautious Revenue Outlook Weighs on Stock
Oracle Plans $45–$50 Billion Funding Push in 2026 to Expand Cloud and AI Infrastructure
Nvidia Nears $20 Billion OpenAI Investment as AI Funding Race Intensifies
Google Cloud and Liberty Global Forge Strategic AI Partnership to Transform European Telecom Services
SpaceX Updates Starlink Privacy Policy to Allow AI Training as xAI Merger Talks and IPO Loom
Nintendo Shares Slide After Earnings Miss Raises Switch 2 Margin Concerns 



