In 1998, Tiger Electronics released the hottest toy of the holiday shopping season: the Furby. The furry alien initially spoke its own language before gradually learning the language of the user.
Which made it a potential secret agent, obviously.
In 1999, The Washington Post reported that the NSA had issued a “Furby Alert,” banning the toy from its offices as a possible security risk.
The concern: If AI-powered Furbies learned human languages by “hearing” them, their microphones could potentially record or repeat classified info.
It turned out Furbies had no recording capabilities; they simply repeated preprogrammed phrases as children played with them.
But this whole debacle has resurfaced thanks to furry and “corporate shitposter” @dakotathekat, who filed a FOIA request for the full memo, which ultimately arrived — all 60+ pages of it — in a manila envelope, per 404 Media.
Key findings:
The media had a field day with the NSA memo when it came out. But, in our modern world, anything that can connect to the internet can be hacked, including children’s toys and (as we unfortunately learned) adult ones.
Wanna take it way back? In the 1960s-‘70s, a hacker figured out that the toy whistles included in boxes of Cap’n Crunch emitted the right frequency to take over phone lines.