Albany Times Union

HOME DEVICES ARE GETTING SMARTER AND CREEPIER, LIKE IT OR NOT

- By Anick Jesdadun

NEW YORK — One day, finding an oven that just cooks food may be as tough as buying a TV that merely lets you change channels.

Internet-connected “smarts” are creeping into cars, refrigerat­ors, thermostat­s, toys and just about everything else in your home. CES 2019, the gadget show opening Tuesday in Las Vegas, will showcase many of these products, including an oven that coordinate­s your recipes and a toilet that flushes with a voice command.

With every additional smart device in your home, companies are able to gather more details about your daily life. Some of that can be used to help advertiser­s target you — more precisely than they could with just the smartphone you carry.

“It’s decentrali­zed surveillan­ce,” said Jeff Chester, executive director for the Center for Digital Democracy, a Washington-based digital privacy advocate. “We’re living in a world where we’re tethered to some online service stealthily gathering our informatio­n.”

Yet consumers so far seem to be welcoming these devices. The research firm IDC projects that 1.3 billion smart devices will ship worldwide in 2022, twice as many as 2018.

Companies say they are building these products not for snooping but for convenienc­e, although Amazon, Google and other partners enabling the intelligen­ce can use the details they collect to customize their services and ads.

Whirlpool, for instance, is testing an oven whose window doubles as a display. You’ll still be able to see what’s roasting inside, but the glass can now display animation pointing to where to place the turkey for optimal cooking.

The oven can sync with your digital calendar and recommend recipes based on how much time you have. It can help coordinate multiple recipes, so that you’re not undercooki­ng the side dishes in focusing too much on the entree. A camera inside lets you zoom in to see if the cheese on the lasagna has browned enough, without opening the oven door.

As for that smart toilet, Kohler’s Numi will respond to voice commands to raise or lower the lid — or to flush. You can do it from an app, too. The company says it’s all about offering hands-free options in a setting that’s very personal for people. The toilet is also heated and can play music and the news through its speakers.

Kohler also has a tub that adjusts water temperatur­e to your liking and a kitchen faucet that dispenses just the right amount of water for a recipe.

For the most part, consumers aren’t asking for these specific features. After all, before cars were invented, people might have known only to ask for faster horses. “We try to be innovative in ways that customers don’t realize they need,” Samsung spokesman Louis Masses said.

Whirlpool said insights can come from something as simple as watching consumers open the oven door several times to check on the meal, losing heat in the process.

“They do not say to us, `Please tell me where to put (food) on the rack, or do algorithm-based cooking,“’ said Doug Searles, general manager for Whirlpool’s research arm, Wlabs. “They tell us the results that are most important to them.”

Samsung has several voiceenabl­ed products, including a fridge that comes with an app that lets you check on its contents while you’re grocery shopping. New this year: Samsung’s washing machines can send alerts to its TVS — smart TVS, of course — so you know your laundry is ready while watching Netflix. Other connected items at CES include:

A fishing rod that tracks your location to build an online map of where you’ve made the most

catches.

A toothbrush that recommends where to brush more.

A fragrance diffuser that lets you control how your home smells from a smartphone app.

These are poised to join internet-connected security cameras, door locks and thermostat­s that are already on the market. The latter can work with sensors to turn the heat down automatica­lly when you leave home.

said consumers feel the need to keep up with their neighbors when they buy appliances with the smartest smarts. He said all the convenienc­es can be “a powerful drug to help people forget the fact that they are also being spied on.”

Gadgets with voice controls typically aren’t transmitti­ng any data back to company servers until you activate them with a trigger word, such as “Alexa” or “OK But devices have sometimes misheard innocuous words as legitimate commands to record and send private conversati­ons .

Even when devices work properly, commands are usually stored indefinite­ly. Companies can use the data to personaliz­e experience­s — including ads. Beyond that, background conversati­ons may be stored with the voice recordings and can resurface with hacking or as part of lawsuits or investigac­hester tions.

Knowing what you cook or stock in your fridge might seem innocuous. But if insurers get hold of the data, they might charge you more for unhealthy diets, warned Paul Stephens, director of policy and advocacy at the Privacy Rights Clearingho­use in San Diego. He also said it might be possible to infer ethnicity based on food consumed.

Manufactur­ers are instead emgoogle.” phasizing the benefits: Data collection from the smart faucet, for instance, allows Kohler’s app to display how much water is dispensed. (Water bills typically show water use for the whole home, not individual taps.)

The market for smart devices is still small, but growing. Kohler estimates that in a few years, smart appliances will make up 10 percent of its revenue. Though the features are initially limited to premium models — such as the $7,000 toilet — they should eventually appear in entry-level products, too, as costs come down.

Consider the TV. “Dumb” TVS are rare these days, as the vast majority of TVS ship with internet connection­s and apps, like it or not.

“It becomes a check-box item for the TV manufactur­er,” said Paul Gagnon, an analyst with IHS Markit. For a dumb one, he said, you have to search for an offbrand, entry-level model with smaller screens — or go to places in the world where streaming services aren’t common.

“Dumb” cars are also headed to the scrapyard. The research firm BI Intelligen­ce estimates that by 2020, three out of every four cars sold worldwide will be models with connectivi­ty. No serious incidents have occurred in the United States, Europe and Japan, but a red flag has already been raised in China, where automakers have been sharing location details of connected cars with the government.

As for TVS, Consumer Reports says many TV makers collect and share users’ viewing habits. Vizio agreed to $2.5 million in penalties in 2017 to settle cases with the Federal Trade Commission and New Jersey officials.

Consumers can decide not to enable these connection­s. They can also vote with their wallets, Stephens said.

“I’m a firm believer that simple is better. If you don’t need to have these so-called enhancemen­ts, don’t buy them,” he said. “Does one really need a refrigerat­or that keeps track of everything in it and tells you you are running out of milk?”

 ??  ?? Kohler’s Numi toilet will respond to voice commands to raise or lower the lid, or to flush. You can do it from an app, too. The company says it’s all about offering hands-free options that are personal for people.
Kohler’s Numi toilet will respond to voice commands to raise or lower the lid, or to flush. You can do it from an app, too. The company says it’s all about offering hands-free options that are personal for people.
 ?? John Locher / Associated Press ?? A smart home mockup is on display at the Tuya booth at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.
John Locher / Associated Press A smart home mockup is on display at the Tuya booth at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas.
 ??  ?? Kohler via Associated Press
Kohler via Associated Press

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