New submitter aaronb1138 writes: So my apartment (UDR) pulled a bit of a blitz last Friday (10/11) to install new “Smart” IoT stuff in my home today (10/15) under the umbrella of SmartRent management. According to a CNET article from earlier this year, this seems to be SmartRent’s usual method of attack. UDR is usually pretty miserly, so I suspect the monetization of my apartment usage is being sold at a nice price to advertisers. SmartRent FAQ claims no data sales, but their privacy policy is wide open and gives no such assurances. Further, they won’t acknowledge if they also operate in California and as such provide me with their CCPA compliance information (I’m in TX, but figured, take the shot).
I asked SmartRent’s Project Manager, Steven, as well as SmartRent’s support not to plug into the electrical power I pay for, but I doubt that will be respected and instead I’ll find them stealing my electricity for their own purposes when I get home. The install list is a smart lock (one of the hackable Yale cheapos), smart thermostat, a couple leak detectors, a dimmer plug — and the scary part — SmartRent’s own Alloy brand SmartRent Hub with 4G backup (who pays the extra for 4G?). I’ll do a full hardware teardown to find out what else is inside the Hub — hopefully just minimally functional cheap ARM stuff and radios. But what else do I do from here /.? I don’t really have time to file a lawsuit, and my gut tells me every step I take against the landlord is going to bring their more onerous leasing agreement line items on my head.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Source: Slashdot – Ask Slashdot: What Should I Do About My Landlord Forcing Smart Things Into My Home?
