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Smart Home Challenges Include Security Concerns; Comcast, Google Tout CHIP

Making internet services ubiquitous in households, a Silicon Labs’ virtual conference theme last week (see 2009110043), necessitates addressing security and other concerns, speakers said. “Our services should melt into the background, becoming as reliable and essential as running water or…

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electricity,” said Grant Erickson, Google principal software engineer. Manufacturers incur high development costs to support multiple, “lightly differentiated and fundamentally non-interoperable stock keeping units,” he said. Consumers don’t know what works together and how their privacy and security are protected, he said. Such challenges must be met to reach the $150 billion 2023 valuation Google expects for the IoT, Erickson said. Google put its weight behind Project Connected Home Over IP. Erickson called CHIP a “critical movement to break through the fragmentation that’s holding the market back.” Comcast invested heavily there, said Jim Kitchen, vice president-product in its connected home devices and platforms unit. That the CHIP code will be available to developers as a starting point will drive ubiquity and interoperability that hasn’t existed before, Kitchen said. Though the IoT has gotten better with advances in technology, it’s confusing for end users, he said. He cited a “boundary” for shopping in store or online to "confidently purchase a device that they know is going to work with the rest of the things that are in their home or with whatever platform they’ve decided to invest in.” He doesn't “know if getting to the next level of interoperability is going to be the thing that finally lets these products get into 300 million homes in North America, but I know that has to happen before we get into 300 million homes.”