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Apple iOS 16.2 Beta is collecting data feedback on accidental activation of SOS emergency calls.

2025-01-19 Update From: SLTechnology News&Howtos shulou NAV: SLTechnology News&Howtos > IT Information >

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Shulou(Shulou.com)11/24 Report--

CTOnews.com, Nov. 14 (Xinhua)-- Apple has introduced a new car accident detection feature on the iPhone 14 / Pro series, which has been working in real life, but it has also been causing false reports. Now, Apple is working hard to reduce inaccurate reports, piloting new user feedback calls in the iOS 16. 2 Beta beta.

Some people have previously found that the feature can be accidentally triggered by a roller coaster. In other cases, the car accident test was not activated at all.

IDeviceHelp screenshots show that Apple iPhone 14 Pro Max asked users for feedback when canceling emergency SOS. The device collects system diagnostic data and sends it to Apple so they can investigate and improve the product.

This diagnostic data can be found on the iOS Beta beta, and the feedback helper application is used to collect Bug and crash data for various errors encountered by users. Of course, there is no feedback assistant in the official version of iOS, but it makes sense for Apple to collect data for such an important feature.

The SOS feature in iOS and watchOS allows the user to quickly call the emergency SOS service by holding down the power and volume buttons, or by quickly pressing the call five times.

CTOnews.com has learned that Apple has added car accident detection to the iPhone 14 series, Apple Watch Series 8 and Apple Watch Ultra. It is integrated into the emergency SOS, and if the user does not respond, the device can automatically contact the SOS service.

Apple executives explained how the feature works and said there was no "cure" to reduce false positives by 100%.

"it depends on how fast we drive before, and what signals we see later," said Ron Huang, Apple's vice president of sensing and connectivity. "your speed changes, combined with impact, combined with pressure changes, combined with sound levels, these are quite dynamic algorithms."

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