Transcription Site Rev Leaves Customer Data Out in the Open

Gig workers warn that more than 40,000 transcribers could access private customer information, including job details

Sarah Emerson
OneZero

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Image: the_burtons/Getty Images

GGig workers for Rev, a popular on-demand transcription service, recently reported that the company was slashing their pay. Now, some freelancers are warning of a security issue involving customer data on Rev’s platform.

When customers submit audio to the service, it goes into a database that is accessible to all of Rev’s 40,000 transcribers (or “Revvers,” as the company calls them). The database that Revvers use to select or “claim” jobs, screenshots of which were viewed by OneZero, lists full names and business titles for customers and permits any transcriber to listen to an audio or video file, so long as it is unclaimed. Though the company touts its “strict customer confidentiality policy” and claims “your files are private and protected from unauthorized access,” the reality is that your audio is essentially up for grabs during its time spent in Rev’s database.

Until a shift in security policy last year, Revvers could also claim and download files, then “unclaim” and return them to the queue. In October 2018, Rev emailed freelancers, saying it was removing the option to download files “due to…

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Sarah Emerson
OneZero

Staff writer at OneZero covering social platforms, internet communities, and the spread of misinformation online. Previously: VICE