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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday January 17 2017, @10:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the there-are-alternatives-to-fighting dept.

With the ability to offer low prices without compromising on technical specs, Chinese manufacturers of consumer video surveillance devices will outpace their US peers if market share boils down to a simple price war:

Chinese video surveillance equipment makers accounted for some 5 percent of US market revenue last year, but high demand and supply in the China market could prove a "ticking time bomb" for US players, said Jimmy Dearing, IHS Markit's residential security analyst.

[...] Increased smartphone adoption had fuelled consumer demand for surveillance, Dearing said, adding that the mobile devices offered video surveillance makers a platform to develop their user interfaces and offer consumers access to their surveillance systems from anywhere. Demand also was driven by better wireless technology, mobile data coverage, and connection speeds, as well as cloud storage and analytics services.

The affordability of such equipment further drove demand, with camera prices dropping by 50 percent in the past three years, the analyst said. This, he noted, could pose challenges to some players in price-sensitive markets, where suppliers offering the lowest prices eventually would gain control.

[...] "Should these Chinese manufacturers intensify their export attempts, this could present the current US market incumbents with a real problem," he said. "US suppliers are unable to compete at these prices because most of them actually OEM their product from a Chinese manufacturer to begin with. If the battle for market share ever came down to simple price war the Chinese OEMs would win, without question."


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  • (Score: 2) by edIII on Tuesday January 17 2017, @08:16PM

    by edIII (791) on Tuesday January 17 2017, @08:16PM (#455039)

    Those *most* people are small to medium business owners and when an event happens that costs them literally 2000-10000% more than the unit itself... they start paying attention. They even start getting interested in suing the vendors.

    Yes, they need to learn the hard way. Money speaks volumes, and when "corporate blobs/binaries" cause immense security issues then people want change.

    Whether binary/blob or not, it needs to be made to MUCH better standards than they are. DVRs and other such devices are starting to become part and parcel of these huge DDOS attacks and need to be secured better.

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