…are you serious?
There would be so much data in understanding people’s light usage. For example, you could figure out how late or early people get up, number of people living in a house, how crowded the house is, how many lights are used per room, etc etc. it would be a gold mine of information.
Let’s say you’re a home automaton designer. You want to design devices to be used in the home, but in order to design such devices, you need enough of a stockpile of user data. This lightbulb data would be incredible valuable.
You can probably even analyse the data and determine things like whether someone is watching tv late at night.
Hyperreality@kbin.social 1 year ago
Location data, when you're home/not home, which room you're likely in/not in. Data that costs almost nothing to produce, but can be sold for millions.
Bulbs tell them when you're in the kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, etc. Relatively easy to combine it with smart tv, smart watch and app/phone data to identify you exactly. Tv went on at 6:53:20, light went on at same time, GPS location, Wifi data.
Combine it all and it's likely they'd be able to identify you exactly and identify what you're doing with a high degree of certainty, then micro-target you with ads or propaganda.
Honestly, there comes a point where you'd have more privacy shoving a camera up your ass.
deweydecibel@lemmy.world 1 year ago
A lot of people don’t seem to understand that each individual but of data is often not valuable in itself, but it is as part of a whole.
Basically, everything there is to know about you is a jigsaw puzzle. Many companies out there want that finished piece, so they pay a premium for each individual piece of the jigsaw, and the companies you give your data to everyday are selling those pieces.
Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works 1 year ago
This might be a stupid question, and I don’t know if anyone would even have the knowledge to answer… but is this data ever audited? Other than possible lawsuits, what prevents me from randomly generating data points for my customers and selling them to these companies? I assume they are cross referencing with other data sets and they could catch on quickly?
cheery_coffee@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
When you sell fraudulent data you get sued for fraud. You can sell low quality data if you advertise it as such.
If you create fraudulent data like adnausium you’ll likely just get banned from Google.
A lot of this data is given for free in exchange for analytics from FB or Google on ad conversion…
hardypart@feddit.de 1 year ago
"Big dat"a has become a buzz word, but it’s a potent and also frightening thing.
Number1SummerJam@lemmy.world 1 year ago
As an added bonus, anything with unnecessary wireless functionality can easily be hacked, controlled and monitored by anyone savvy enough
cheery_coffee@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
It would be hella cyberpunk for someone to hack lightbulbs, install IPFS on them, and set up free storage for everyone.
Somebody would fill it all with goatse bitmaps or random numbers or something, but for a fleeting moment the internet would be weird again.
heyoni@lemm.ee 1 year ago
And now you can do it with curl!
Gork@lemm.ee 1 year ago
Intelligence / espionage agents will have a field day with this kind of info.
cheery_coffee@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Likely they want detailed user data and what devices you use, and they want to cross reference that with geolocation so they can upsell you stuff.
I would say it’s likely they’ll start serving ads in the app and “recommending” you other services or things like a subscription. Any app that you have to look at will get ads these days, just look at Uber.
This is why I bought IKEA bulbs that are dumb. I avoid anything that uses an app, because it will update itself to make a new thing sell better.