The NSA would certainly love to get their hands on this, and then figure out a way to mass produce them while lowering the overall cost. The Coversnitch will be able to send snippets of transcribed audio to Twitter as well, where the entire idea of creating this work of art, according to Kyle McDonald and Brian House, is to help folks think about public and private spaces in a time when just about anything can be broadcast by ubiquitous, Internet-connected listening devices.
House asked, “What does it mean to deploy one of these in a library, a public square, someone’s bedroom? What kind of power relationship does it set up? And what does this stream of tweets mean if it’s not set up by an artist but by the U.S. government?”
Rhetorical questions, surely, but interesting ones. The Conversnitch will comprise of a Raspberry Pi miniature computer, an LED light source and a plastic flower pot, where it can be screwed onto any standard bulb socket and draw its juice from there before uploading captured audio via Wi-Fi to Amazon’s Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing platform.