惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 【当耐特】
博客园 - 叶小钗
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
量子位
雷峰网
雷峰网
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
The Cloudflare Blog
Vercel News
Vercel News
L
LangChain Blog
B
Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
GbyAI
GbyAI
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
A
About on SuperTechFans
博客园 - Franky
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
C
Cisco Blogs
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
I
Intezer
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
T
Tor Project blog
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
F
Fortinet All Blogs
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
S
Security Affairs
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
小众软件
小众软件
D
DataBreaches.Net
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
S
Securelist
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog

Forbes - Innovation

Why Do Humans Have Fingerprints? Hint: It’s Not What You Think Booking.com Confirms Data Breach, Reservation PIN Codes Changed Why Major News Sites Are Blocking The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine iPhone Fold Release Date: New Report Details Frustrating Apple News Comet Tracker: How To See Pan-STARRS And Three Planets On Wednesday NYT Mini Crossword Today: Tuesday, April 14 Hints And Answers Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Tuesday, April 14 (It’s A Little Unclear) Today’s Wordle #1760 Hints And Answer For Tuesday, April 14 Most Of The Microplastics In Urban Air Come From Tires Today’s Wordle #1759 Hints And Answer For Monday, April 13 NYT Mini Crossword Today: Monday, April 13 Hints And Answers NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Monday, April 13 The YC Chief Who Codes 10,000 Lines A Day Has A Simple Secret Samsung Expands One UI 8.5 Beta To More Galaxy Owners Why You Should Stop Using Your iPhone If It’s On This List Chamath Says Firms That Treat AI As A Strategy Hand Rivals Their Edge 3 Unexpected Habits Of Secure Couples, By A Psychologist The First Lamp That Folds Your Clothes Samsung’s Disappointing Price Update For Galaxy Phone Buyers 3 Subtle Signs Someone Is Falling In Love With You, By A Psychologist Do Mantis Shrimp See More Colors Than Humans? A Biologist Explains NYT Connections Answers Explained For Monday, April 13 (#1,037) NYT Connections Hints Today: Monday, April 13 Clues And Answers (#1,037) LEGO Luigi & Mach 8 (72050) Review: 2026’s Best Set Yet? Marc Andreessen Says AI Productivity Will Trigger A Hiring Boom 3D Printing Is The Ultimate Hack To Reduce Household Spending Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Apple Smart Glasses: New Leak Reveals A Major Design Twist To Beat Meta Tested: The AI Coming To The Rivian R2 Quordle Hints Today: Monday, April 13 Clues And Answers Companies And H-1B Employees Endure Immigration Waits At Consulates 3 Easy Ways To Turn Anxiety Into Sustained Focus, By A Psychologist Here’s The Most Affordable Humanoid Robot You Can Buy Now UFC 327 Results: 5 Biggest Takeaways From A Wild Night In Miami UFC 327 Results, Bonus Winners, Highlights And Reactions Dana White Announces Huge New Fight For UFC White House Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Sunday, April 12 (Get Ready) Tesla ‘Model 2’ Rises From The Ashes Today’s Wordle #1758 Hints And Answer For Sunday, April 12 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Sunday, April 12 Tyson Fury Vs. Arslanbek Mahkmudov Results: Highlights and Reaction NYT Mini Crossword Today: Sunday, April 12 Hints And Answers How Shadow AI Culture Is Destroying Your Business Venture Capital Funds That Market Like Startups Win More Deals Conor Benn Vs. Regis Prograis Results: Highlights and Reaction Samsung’s Disappointing Price Update For Galaxy Phone Buyers Artemis Reached The Moon. The Grid Can Reach The 21st Century A Biologist Explains How Archerfish Shoot Down Prey. Hint: Their Aim Rivals Human Throwing Is It Time For Apple To Forget About The MacBook Air NYT Connections Hints Today: Sunday, April 12 Clues And Answers (#1036) Trump’s 2027 Budget To Reshape U.S. Environmental And Energy Policy CDC Delays Reporting Of COVID-19 Vaccine Benefits—Here’s What To Know Oura Has Designed A Solution To A Big Smart Ring Problem Netflix’s Best New Show Has A Near-Perfect 95% Rotten Tomatoes Score Coachella 2026 Is Being Taken Over By Creator Streams Quordle Hints Today: Sunday, April 12 Clues And Answers This Startup Wants To Use AI To Help Digitize History How To Get The Best Shield In ‘Crimson Desert’ Microsoft Venom Attack Targets C-Suite Executives ‘Maul: Shadow Lord’ Sets Even More Star Wars Rotten Tomatoes Records 3 Ways Happy Couples Argue Differently, By A Psychologist Success For Leapmotor Might Have Negatives For Stellantis New Names Surface As Potential Rogue And Wonder Woman In The MCU And DCU 4 Reasons Artemis Mission Matters Even If You Think It Is Wasteful Fast ‘Crimson Desert’ Patch Adds New Moves, Shield Hiding And One Great Feature Why Do Humans Blush? An Evolutionary Biologist Explains The Signal We Can’t Control Apple iPhone Fold: Striking Design Revealed In Leaked Photos Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update iOS 26.4.1 Release: Crucial iPhone Feature Update Arrives, But No Security Fix Fury vs. Makhmudov Full Card, Ring Walk Times and How to Watch Can’t Stand Liquid Glass? This New Hidden iPhone Setting Is A Game-Changer Test-Driving The 2026 Changan Deepal S05: Italian Style Made In China NSA Warning—Reboot Your Internet Router Now Ways That Human-AI Collaboration Slides People Into ‘AI Brain Fry’ And Cognitive Downturns Stop Using These Networks—Google, NSA And TSA Warn NASA Changes Moon Plan: Landing Now Depends On SpaceX Or Blue Origin Samsung Expands One UI 8.5 Beta To More Galaxy Owners The Evolution Of Programmable Hardware At Xilinx NYT Mini Today: Saturday, April 11 Hints And Answers Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Spangram, Answers: Saturday, April 11 (You’re Putting Me On) Splashdown! NASA’s Artemis II Returns To Earth After Moon Mission Attention Is All You Need. The Human Kind Is Still The One That Counts Today’s Wordle #1757 Hints And Answer For Saturday, April 11 NYT Pips Today: Hints, Answers And Walkthrough For Saturday, April 11 Android Circuit: Galaxy S27 Pro Emerges, Honor 600 Pre-Order Offers, Pixel 11 Display Leaks Apple Loop: iPhone 18 Pro Leak, Urgent iOS Update, MacBook Neo Issues Morgan Stanley Has Mostly Positive Outlook On Tesla Robotaxi, FSD V15 Running Out Of AI Tokens Faster Than Ever? Here’s Why CoreWeave Shares Pop 13% After Anthropic Deal ‘Euphoria’ Season 3’s Rotten Tomatoes Score Crashes, Has Lost Key Player People Don’t Agree On What AI Can Do, But They Don’t Even Use The Same Product ‘Overwhelming’—Google Issues Gemini Update For Gmail Users NYT Connections Hints Today: Saturday, April 11 Clues And Answers (#1035) Quordle Hints Today: Saturday, April 11 Clues And Answers The Costly Dream Of Space-Based AI Infrastructure Can You See The Watcher In This ‘Daredevil: Born Again’ Shot? Adobe Attacks Underway—Windows And Mac Users Given 72 Hours To Update You Just Watched The Backdoor Pilot For ‘The Pitt: Night Shift’ Are Nicotine Pouches Like Zyn And VELO Safe To Use? A Doctor Answers Human Resources (HR) Is The Key To AI Success Per WalkMe ( SAP)
Smart Homes Won’t Scale Until The Privacy Problem Is Fixed
Gary Drenik · 2026-05-28 · via Forbes - Innovation
Smart Home Technology

Smart Home Technology

Getty Images - Issarawat Tattong

For years, smart home technology promised lower energy bills, improved security and homes that adapt automatically to the people inside them. But despite steady improvements in AI and automation, adoption lagged industry expectations and has begun to slow. The reason isn’t hard to identify. Consumers are increasingly weary that smart home devices come with hidden tradeoffs like invasive data collection, questionable data sharing practices, and cybersecurity risks.

The challenge facing smart homes isn’t technological readiness, but consumer trust. Without trust, even the most advanced connected technology stalls at the point of adoption.

According to a recent survey from my company, Prosper Insights & Analytics, fewer than half of U.S. adults agreed that Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant feels “like a friend.” That skepticism is reinforced by a steady drumbeat of headlines, like Amazon removing key privacy settings, Google continuing to collect data from discontinued devices and ongoing regulatory scrutiny of Meta’s data practices.

Prosper - Alexa and Google Assistant Like A Friend

Prosper Insights & Analytics

The message consumers are absorbing is simple – smart home devices collect more data than they should, share it more widely than people expect and offer too little visibility into what happens after installation. Whether that perception is always fair doesn’t matter. That perception shapes behavior, and right now, it’s suppressing adoption.

“Smart home technology has reached a reckoning point,” said Brendan O’Toole, vice president smart home and energy management for Copeland. “Companies can treat privacy as a design constraint to be optimized away or as a foundational requirement for growth, but only one of those paths allows the category to scale in a meaningful way.”

The Transparency Gap

Smart home manufacturers nearly always disclose privacy information, but it’s often buried or difficult for homeowners to understand. In fact, most privacy policies are written in dense legal and technical language that makes informed consent nearly impossible. Consumers click “Agree” not because they understand the policy – and the potential trade‑offs – but because agreeing is a condition to using the product. As a result, companies collect vast amounts of consumer data, but consumers have little understanding of how or why it’s used.

Research from Copeland’s annual Smart Home Data Privacy Report illustrates this disconnect. Data privacy is a top deciding factor when purchasing new smart home technology, yet only 8% of homeowners say they research data privacy policies before buying a smart thermostat. At the same time, 29% express significant concern about data protection and 33% worry about data privacy. Perhaps most telling is this: 55% of smart thermostat owners report they don’t understand how their device collects data at all.

This isn’t a consumer education problem - it’s a transparency problem. When privacy details are buried in lengthy policies, people move forward with caution or disengage completely, which ultimately slows adoption. And once trust is lost, it’s costly – even sometimes impossible – to recover.

The Energy Paradox

Smart thermostats are among the most practical applications of smart home technology. They reduce household energy costs and give utilities a powerful tool to manage peak load. Heating and cooling account for nearly half of the average U.S. homeowner’s energy costs, roughly $900 per year, and smart thermostats can reduce HVAC energy costs by up to 20%. Yet consumer adoption has been stagnant over the past few years.

A recent Prosper Insights & Analytics survey shows that while nearly 34% of U.S. adults use a smart home assistant, those tools are used predominantly to seek information. Consumers are comfortable asking for the weather, but they’re far less comfortable handing over continuous household data – even when the payoff is lower energy bills.

Prosper - Use A Smart Home Assistant

Prosper Insights & Analytics

That hesitation has far-reaching consequences. After nearly two decades of flat electricity demand, U.S. power consumption is now growing at its fastest pace since the early 2000s, driven in large part by the expansion of AI and data centers. Smart thermostats only deliver grid‑level benefits when large numbers of homeowners opt in to programs that allow utilities to briefly adjust heating and cooling during periods of peak demand. Currently, data privacy fears are limiting that participation. Fewer connected homes mean fewer volunteers for demand response, reduced energy savings, and greater strain on an already stressed grid.

Copeland’s data show that concerns about data privacy and protection have remained a consistent barrier to adoption. While the technology has matured and the benefits have been proven, adoption remains constrained by distrust over privacy and security.

Therein lies the paradox – consumers want efficiency, sustainability, and lower costs, but not at the expense of losing control over their personal data.

What Consumers Actually Want

Despite the industry’s mixed signals, consumer expectations around privacy are largely consistent.

Homeowners want security, clarity, and control. In practical terms, that means strong device encryption, clear opt‑in defaults rather than silent opt‑outs and greater use of local data processing instead of cloud‑dependent storage. It also means explaining data practices in plain language rather than through dense legal documents.

When companies meet those expectations, they don’t just reduce risk—they differentiate themselves.

Copeland’s Sensi thermostat brand offers one example of how transparency can be operationalized. Their privacy notice clearly states three principles: it does not use thermostat activity for advertising, it does not sell personal data for any reason, and it does automate changes based on assumptions about user priorities. These directly address common fears around surveillance, resale, and loss of control, using language that homeowners can understand.

Several firms offer smart home thermostats including Amazon Smart Thermostat, ecobee, Google Nest, and Honeywell Home; each with different privacy policies.

The point isn’t that one brand has solved the problem. Rather, it’s that consumer‑driven privacy design can and should be table stakes. Companies that fail to align with these expectations risk being grouped with the worst actors, regardless of their intentions.

The Way Forward

Privacy is no longer an exercise in compliance. And in the smart home market, it may soon become the primary differentiator between products that scale and those that stall.

Companies that lead with privacy‑first engineering – designing data protection into hardware, software, and user experience from the outset – stand to gain a competitive advantage. Copeland’s 2026 Smart Home Data Privacy Report found that 70% of respondents would consider replacing their smart thermostat with another brand that offered greater privacy or security. That sentiment translates directly into purchase intent.

The smart home industry sits at a crossroads. Energy systems are under strain, and consumers are increasingly sensitive to surveillance and data misuse. And trust, once broken, is expensive to rebuild. The companies that succeed will be the ones that recognize privacy not as a barrier to innovation, but as the foundation that makes innovation and adoption possible.

Smart homes won’t scale until the privacy problem is fixed. The technology is ready; the question is whether the industry is.

Disclosure: The consumer sentiment studies referenced above were conducted by my company, Prosper Insights & Analytics. This dataset is also used by the National Retail Federation and is available through Amazon Web Services, Bloomberg, and the London Stock Exchange Group for economic benchmarking.