Someone claimed that the slider mute switches on Google Home products are software-driven on HN with zero evidence, so I checked. At least on the Home Mini it's hardware. (Also, if you make hard claims on the internet with zero evidence, you're an asshole).
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AFAICT the mics are TDM mics in a stereo config (shared data line, idling at average of ~1/2 Vcc, don't have scope with me to check). That's connected to a single AND gate (SN74LV1T00 or equiv), the other input comes from the mute switch.
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When the mute is engaged, the output of the gate drops to 0V, and that is what goes to the SoC (after a divider, the SoC is probably 1.8V logic while the mics/AND are at 3.3V).
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I traced the path from the hardware switch, through a filter/debounce network, to the AND gate, and from the mics to the AND gate. So unless there are backdoor buried traces that bypass this (which would be hard evidence of a backdoor, since they would make *no sense*), it's safe
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Replying to @marcan42
Does the SoC have other sensors that can be used as mics, though?
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Replying to @RichFelker @marcan42
According to
@eevblog some ceramic capacitors can pick up sound (5:50) https://youtu.be/F2gX-R1k7MM Now whether any are hooked up in a way on a Google Home device where the software can actually use them for this purpose is an altogether different matter1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
The mics are digital, so the analog audio input, if any, is unused. I'm not going to claim it's impossible to make it happen somehow, but it seems like a *very* long shot.
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