With Roomba’s maps, Amazon’s vision of ambient intelligence in the smart home is suddenly attainable
When I spoke to iRobot’s Colin Angle earlier this summer, he said iRobot OS — the latest software operating system for its robot vacuums and mops — would provide its household bots with a deeper understanding of your home and your habits. This takes on a whole new meaning with the news today that Amazon has bought iRobot for $1.7 billion.
From a smart home perspective, it seems clear Amazon wants iRobot for the maps it generates to give it that deep understanding of our homes. The vacuum company has detailed knowledge of our floor plans and, crucially, how they change. It knows where your kitchen is, which your kids’ rooms are, where your sofa is (and how new it is), and if you recently turned the guest room into a nursery.
This type of data is digital gold to a company whose primary purpose is to sell you more stuff. While I’m interested to see how Amazon can leverage iRobot’s tech to improve its smart home ambitions, many are right to be concerned with the privacy implications. People want home automation to work better, but they don’t want to give up the intimate details of their lives for more convenience.
This is a conundrum throughout the tech world, but in our homes, it’s far more personal. Amazon’s history of sharing data with police departments through its subsidiary Ring, combined with its “always listening (for the wake word)” Echo smart speakers and now its thorough knowledge of your floor plan, give it a pretty complete picture of your daily life.
This is totally creepy. We don't have a roomba and now we never will.
Spouse #1: Honey, what's that noise? Spouse #2: Oh, it's just the roomba. Spouse #1: Yeah, but it sounds like it's talking? Spouse #2: Well, what's it saying? ... Roomba: I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.
Did you see that article about the chess robot that grabbed the finger of his 7-year old human opponent, ultimately breaking the boy's finger before three adults where able to forcibly detach the robot from the boy's finger?
I'm pretty sure that robot needs to have Asimov's laws programmed into it!!
Originally posted by ShiroKuro: This is totally creepy. We don't have a roomba and now we never will.
Spouse #1: Honey, what's that noise? Spouse #2: Oh, it's just the roomba. Spouse #1: Yeah, but it sounds like it's talking? Spouse #2: Well, what's it saying? ... Roomba: I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that.
" I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that." Excellent, wish I had thought to use that.
-------------------------------- Several people have eaten my cooking and survived.
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