No surprise that a Chinese smart coffee maker collects data quietly. It would be ironic (but entirely plausible) that the same data will get sold to an American data aggregator that can now learn new insights about you by mashing your coffee drinking and behavior around the kitchen with your bank transaction data to glean some unique insight. They could find a way for the smart speaker in your car to take real-time action on such "insight"
The Chinese coffee machine case "provides evidence as to the scale of the data privacy issues as more [Internet Of Things] IOT devices are adopted by consumers and businesses," says New Kite Data Labs. "IOT devices are widely known to suffer from widespread security shortcomings that are not generally covered by security patches."
Once such data collection practices become ubiquitous most consumers will stop caring. It will be the cost of having "conveniences" using smart devices and people maybe willing to pay.
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