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The WIRED article concerns the development of a new style of smoke detector, which doesn't need to be hard-wired, and which can be connected to home-coordination systems like Alexa. The system sells itself on being able to link the potentially life-saving intervention of detecting smoke to systems that could take action even when users are incapacitated. I chose this article because I think it is emblematic of the pro-IOT reviewer space.
The article by The Conversation is quite critical. Instead of highlighting the efficient changes IOT tech can make in many people's lives, it points out the important concerns that many IOT and general tech-skeptics have with the industry. These concerns need to be addressed before the society-wide efficiency increases promised by many technologists can occur.
Farrell, N. (2026, February 18). Ring and Kidde’s Newest Smoke Detector Is Here, and It’s Battery Powered (2026). WIRED. https://www.wired.com/story/kidde-ring-new-smoke-alarm-2026/
Sella-Villa, D. (2025, June 24). How Internet of Things devices affect your privacy – even when they’re not yours. The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/how-internet-of-things-devices-affect-your-privacy-even-when-theyre-not-yours-251592
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