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TECH TALK

• Residents in Providence, Rhode Island, are paying more for a ride on the city’s popular electric bikes.

JUMP, an Uber-owned company, announced a change in its pricing model Monday.

A $2 fee now buys only six minutes and 40 seconds on the electrified bike share.

Last week, that same $2 could buy a 30-minute ride. An hour-long ride costs more than four times as much, going from $4.10 to $18.

The company says it has also “temporarily paused” the monthly subscription service.

JUMP riders and city officials criticized the new fee structure.

The Providence Journal reports that city spokesman Ben Smith says Providence is “disappointed in this fee increase.”

Smith says the city will advocate for JUMP to reevaluate the price changes and expects the monthly plan to return soon.

• Alexa will see you now.

Britain’s health care service is teaming up with Amazon’s digital voice assistant to help answer medical queries with advice from the service’s official website. Critics, however, warn about risks to data privacy.

The British government said Wednesday that the system will help people get quick and accurate health information. It will be especially useful for senior citizens, blind people and others who find it hard to access the internet while also easing pressure on doctors.

Using Amazon’s algorithms, Alexa can answer voice questions from users about common maladies such as the flu or chickenpox with information verified by the National Health Service.

It’s part of the British government’s long-term modernisation plan to provide more digital health services.

“We want to empower every patient to take better control of their health care,” said Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

Privacy campaigners said that while making it easier for people to access reliable medical advice was a step in the right direction, they were concerned about the partnership and its implications.

“Amazon is a company with a worrying track record when it comes to the way they handle their users’ data,” said Eva Blum-Dumontet, a researcher at Privacy International. “Our medical information is often the most sensitive data there is about us and a lot can be inferred from the questions we ask and the searches we make when we have health concerns.”

Privacy concerns surrounding voice assistants have come into focus amid reports that services like Alexa are listening and recording conversations in homes. A lawsuit filed last month in U.S. federal court alleged that Amazon is violating laws in eight states by recording children without consent through Alexa devices.

Amazon on Wednesday sought to reassure users that their information will be kept confidential, and not shared with third parties, used to sell products or to build a health profile.

“Customer trust is of the utmost importance, and Amazon takes privacy seriously,” the company said in a statement, adding that users control their voice history and can delete recordings.

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