ABCs of IOT
ABCs of IOT
ABCs of IOT
Here's the scene: You are away on vacation and the house is empty. A moisture sensor
detects water on the basement floor. That sensor finding is processed by an app, which has
received another report from a temperature sensor that detects the flow of water in the
main water pipe. (When water flows, it takes away heat and lowers the temperature).
That both sensors are detecting anomalies is cause for concern. A high rate of flowing
water may signal a burst pipe, triggering an automated valve shutoff; a slight water flow
might be a running toilet, and the water on the basement floor by routine leakage from a
heavy rain. In either case, you get a machine-generated message describing the findings.
Here's how you investigate. Via a mobile app, you get two one-time codes to unlock your
front door, one for your neighbor and another for a plumber. When the door is unlocked, a
text alert tells you who entered. Having knowledge of the condition of your home may be a
big driver of IoT adoption.
For instance, let's say you decide to take a pint of Ben and Jerry's ice cream out of the
freezer. When that happens, a connected wireless speaker announces, loudly: "Please
reconsider this selection. As requested, here is your most recent weight and BMI." The
wireless speaker is reporting data collected from your bathroom scale. The scale was never
designed to communicate with a refrigerator, but an app writer made it so by linking data
from the scale and fridge. This scale-fridge-speaker combination may seem silly, but here's
the point: In the IoT, app writers now have the ability to connect seemingly disparate things
to create new types of functionality.
ZigBee is an open protocol, but its critics say that not all of its implementations are
necessarily the same. ZigBee runs a certification to ensure standard deployments. Insteon
and Z-Wave are proprietary, which may ensure standardization of implementation.
Skeptics say it's unlikely that all the big vendors will embrace open standards. A more likely
outcome for the IoT are technological islands defined by proprietary data interchanges.
Without open standards or open communication protocols, devices on the network won't be
able to share data and work in concert. Will Apple develop products that can connect with
Samsung products? Will Bosch products communicate with those from Samsung or Sears?
Maybe not.
Consumers will be frustrated and will be told that they need to buy into a particular vendor's
product partner network to get a full IoT experience.
Will the IoT destroy what little privacy you have left?
Privacy advocates are plenty worried about the IoT's impact on consumers. Part of this is
due to the arrival of IPv6 addresses, the next generation Internet protocol. It replaces IPv4,
which assigned 32-bit addresses, with a total limit of 4.3 billion; IPv6 is 128-bit, and allows for
340 trillion trillion trillion addresses or
340,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. This makes it possible to assign a
unique identifier to anything that's part of the IoT (although not everything needs to be IP
addressable, such as light switches). This may enable deep insights into a home. Smart
metering systems, for instance, will be able to track individual appliance use.
"Information about a power consumer's schedule can reveal intimate, personal details about
their lives, such as their medical needs, interactions with others, and personal habits,"
warned the Electronic Privacy Information Center, in testimony in late 2013 at a Federal
Trade Commission workshop. This is information that may be shared with third parties. At
this same FTC workshop, another leading privacy group, the Center for Democracy and
Technology, outlined its nightmare scenario.
Data integration is often underestimated and poorly implemented, taking time and
resources. Yet it
Light sensors in a home can tell how often certain rooms are occupied, and temperature
sensors may be able to tell when one bathes, exercises or leaves the house; microphones
can easily pick up the content of conversations. The message is clear: Courts, regulators
and lawmakers will be fighting over IoT privacy safeguards for years to come.
electronics and the entire category of wearables, including clothing. Even plumbers will
have to be aware of the IoT because of connected shut-off valves. But no one is going to
stand in line for the latest smart refrigerator. It isn't the next iPad. The IoT rollout will be
slow and will occur over many years, as appliances are replaced and home electrical
systems are upgraded with smart devices.