vlog

Skip to content
NOWCAST vlog News at 10pm Sunday Night
Live Now
Advertisement

Smart vacuum technology raises privacy concerns

Smart vacuum technology raises privacy concerns
I. Robot maker of the Roomba, has big plans for its automated vacuum bots. Company Ceo Colin Engel believes the future of the company's floor cleaning bots collide in using them to map the layout of customers homes. In *** report, Engel says items such as smart thermometers and smart speakers still have *** way to go in terms of spatial awareness of surroundings. But using regularly updated data from *** patrolling rumba could possibly allow smart speakers to better adjust to *** houses acoustics. It could also help *** smart thermometer take your home square footage into account for more accurate heating or cooling.
Advertisement
Smart vacuum technology raises privacy concerns
Robotic devices such as Roomba are meant to scour your floor, cleaning your home while you’re away but what if they were gathering more than just dust? The creator of Roomba, iRobot, is toying with idea of using the mini vacuums to include mapping technology that would generate a complete picture of the rooms it cleans. According to Reuters, this technology could be used to start the process of making “smart homes” a thing of the future. “Smart homes” as a concept would allow homeowners to talk with an artificial intelligence voice. Companies such as Apple, Xfinity and Nest already offer a variation of this idea. Those companies allow users to access their air conditioning systems, wireless lighting and even home security but iRobot would take it one step further. Sound familiar? That’s because there was Disney channel original movie that aired in 1999 that explored the reality of this idea but to a much a larger scale. It was called “Smart House.” The technology used by Roomba not only uses infrared or laser sensors to detect and avoid obstacles but it utilizes “slam technology” combining localization and mapping to give the device the ability to keep track of where it is in the room and to map out the entire room. Some are concerned about potential privacy issues that could arise if larger companies were to gain access to the information gathered. The terms and services for iRobot allow for the company to share any information gathered to third party vendors and affiliates, the government and "any company transaction, such as a merger, sale of all or a portion of company assets or shares."Colin Angle, iRobot’s CEO, has reportedly said iRobot would not sell any data without consulting the customers first.While the concept is said to still be in the works, there are whispers of a possible deal taking place between iRobot, which made Roomba compatible with Amazon’s voice assistant Alexa, and three companies, Amazon, Google or even Apple, in the next couple of years.Despite the claims, all three companies have declined to comment.

Robotic devices such as Roomba are meant to scour your floor, cleaning your home while you’re away but what if they were gathering more than just dust?

The creator of Roomba, iRobot, is toying with idea of using the mini vacuums to include mapping technology that would generate a complete picture of the rooms it cleans.

Advertisement

Related Content

this technology could be used to start the process of making “smart homes” a thing of the future.

“Smart homes” as a concept would allow homeowners to talk with an artificial intelligence voice.

Companies such as Apple, Xfinity and Nest already offer a variation of this idea. Those companies allow users to access their air conditioning systems, wireless lighting and even home security but iRobot would take it one step further.

Sound familiar? That’s because there was Disney channel original movie that aired in 1999 that explored the reality of this idea but to a much a larger scale. It was called “Smart House.”

This content is imported from Giphy. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

The technology used by Roomba not only uses infrared or laser sensors to detect and avoid obstacles but it utilizes “slam technology” combining localization and mapping to give the device the ability to keep track of where it is in the room and to map out the entire room.

that could arise if larger companies were to gain access to the information gathered. The terms and services for iRobot allow for the company to share any information gathered to third party vendors and affiliates, the government and "any company transaction, such as a merger, sale of all or a portion of company assets or shares."

Colin Angle, iRobot’s CEO, has reportedly said iRobot would not sell any data without consulting the customers first.

While the concept is said to still be in the works, there are whispers of a possible deal taking place between iRobot, which made Roomba compatible with Amazon’s voice assistant Alexa, and three companies, Amazon, Google or even Apple, in the next couple of years.

Despite the claims, all three companies have declined to comment.