The ‘Worst in Show’ CES products put your data at risk and cause waste,
privacy advocates say
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[January 09, 2025] By
SARAH PARVINI
LAS VEGAS (AP) — So much of the technology showcased at CES includes
gadgets made to improve consumers' lives — whether by leveraging AI to
make devices that help people become more efficient, by creating
companions to cure loneliness or by providing tools that help people
with mental and physical health.
But not all innovation is good, according to a panel of self-described
dystopia experts that has judged some products as “Worst in Show." The
award that no company wants to win calls out the “least repairable,
least private, and least sustainable products on display."
“We’re seeing more and more of these things that have basically
surveillance technology built into them, and it enables some cool
things,” Liz Chamberlain, director of sustainability at the e-commerce
site iFixit told The Associated Press. “But it also means that now we’ve
got microphones and cameras in our washing machines, refrigerators and
that really is an industry-wide problem.”
The fourth annual contest announced its decisions Thursday.
A new smart ring every few years?
Kyle Wiens, CEO of iFixit, awarded the Ultrahuman Rare Luxury Smart Ring
the title of “least repairable.”
The rings, which come in colors like dune and desert sand, cost $2,200.
Wiens said the jewelry “looks sleek but hides a major flaw: its battery
only lasts 500 charges.” Worse, he said, is the fact that replacing the
battery is impossible without destroying the device entirely.
“Luxury items may be fleeting, but two years of use for $2,200 is a new
low,” he said.
An AI-powered smart crib?
Bosch’s “Revol” crib uses sensors, cameras and AI that the company says
can help monitor vital signs like how an infant is sleeping, their heart
and respiratory rates and more. The crib can also rock gently if the
baby needs help falling asleep and signal to parents if a blanket or
other object is interfering with breathing.
The company says users can how and where their data is stored. Bosch
also says the crib can be transformed into a desk as children get older.
But EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn said the crib preys on parents'
fears and “collects excessive data about babies via a camera,
microphone, and even a radar sensor.”
“Parents expect safety and comfort — not surveillance and privacy risks
— in their children’s cribs,” she said in the report.
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The Ultrahuman Rare luxury smart ring is on display at the
Ultrahuman booth during the CES tech show Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025,
in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)
Too much waste?
Although AI is everywhere at CES, Stacey Higginbotham, a policy
Fellow at Consumer Reports, felt that SoundHound AI’s In-Car
Commerce Ecosystem, powered by its Automotive AI, pushes it to
unnecessary extremes.
The feature “increases energy consumption, encourages wasteful
takeout consumption and distracts drivers—all while adding little
value,” Higginbotham said. That landed the in-car system as “least
sustainable” on the list.
Vulnerable to hacking
TP-Link's Archer BE900 router won for “least secure” of CES. The
company is a top-selling router brand in the U.S. But its products
are vulnerable to hacking, said Paul Roberts, founder of The
Security Ledger.
"By Chinese law, TP-Link must report security flaws to the
government before alerting the public, creating a significant
national security risk," he said. “Yet TP-Link showcased its Archer
BE900 router at CES without addressing these vulnerabilities.”
Who asked for this?
The awards also feature a category called “who asked for this?” Top
of that list was Samsung's Bespoke AI Washing Machine, which Nathan
Proctor, senior director of U.S. PIRG, a consumer advocacy group,
said is filled “with features no one needs,” including the ability
to make phone calls.
“These add-ons only make the appliance more expensive, fragile, and
harder to repair,” he said.
The worst overall
Gay Gordon-Byrne, executive director of The Repair Association
called the LG “AI Home Inside 2.0 Refrigerator with ThinkQ” the
worst product overall. The fridge adds “flashy features,”
Gordon-Byrne said, including a screen and internet connection.
“But these come at a cost,” Gordon-Byrne said. “Shorter software
support, higher energy consumption, and expensive repairs reduce the
fridge’s practical lifespan, leaving consumers with an expensive,
wasteful gadget.”
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