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posted by Fnord666 on Monday December 12 2016, @02:58AM   Printer-friendly
from the all-your-boink-detecting-mattresses-are-belong-to-us dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found an interesting story over at The Register about regulating the security of IoT devices:

Washington DC think tank the Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology is calling for regulation on "negligence" in the design of internet-of-things (IoT) devices.

Researchers James Scott and Drew Spaniel point out in their report Rise of the Machines: The Dyn Attack Was Just a Practice Run [PDF] that IoT represents a threat that is only beginning to be understood.

The pair say the risk that regulation could stifle market-making IoT innovation (like the WiFi cheater-detection mattress) is outweighed by the need to stop feeding Shodan.

"National IoT regulation and economic incentives that mandate security-by-design are worthwhile as best practices, but regulation development faces the challenge of ... security-by-design without stifling innovation, and remaining actionable, implementable and binding," Scott and Spaniel say.

[...] State level regulation would be "disastrous" to markets and consumers alike.

Does the ability of a company to make money now outweigh the security of our digital homes and devices?


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  • (Score: 2) by jmorris on Monday December 12 2016, @03:39PM

    by jmorris (4844) on Monday December 12 2016, @03:39PM (#440392)

    Stupid needs to hurt, as pain is the only way most people are capable of learning. So no, I do not pity the fool who buys an Amazon Echo. Raise your hand if you don't already see the inevitable backlash that will see every Echo in a landfill. It listens to everything said in range of the mic. How long until a court order hits Amazon for access to the records we all know it keeps in perpetuity? Nobody sees that one coming? Really?

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