In September 2016, I was delighted to deliver this talk to ThingMonk 2016.
This is the 20 minute distilation of my adventures Singing to my lightbulbs, hacking my vacuum cleaner, finding my car's source code, hacking my electric car, getting hacked by my light switches, securing my security cameras, and a whole host of other IoT nonsense.
Huge thanks to Bennycrime for filming, and the whole ThingMonk team.
If you'd like me to speak at your conference, please get in touch.
A selection of comments about the talk as I gave it.
audience warming up is now warming up
@edent. we have FEEDBACK LOOPS happening
#thingmonk
"I am driving round in an un-patched Linux box" -
@edent
in his BWM i3
#thingmonk
"Why does my light switch want to call premium rate numbers?" Connected house of horrors by
@edent
#thingmonk
pic.x.com/ie9ngghknc
"My smart light switch makes me want to cry," says
@edent.
#iot
#thingmonk
pic.x.com/kkbkhxxici
Listening to
@edent
describe my life in his Connected House of Horrors at
#thingmonk
Beardy, long haired 'cool guy'
@edent
hates his life. Because his connected life serves as bad example for everyone else. :-)
#thingmonk
.
@edent
I googled Wi-FI light switch to buy one and you came out as the first organic search result!
#thingmonk
#IoT
pic.x.com/aycyxnylur
That was such a great talk by
@edent
here at
@thingmonk, about the horrors of poor software design for the connected home (and car).
#thingmonk
@edent
"Nest sent me an email when I inserted the wrong brand batteries" "thanks for the therapy session"
#hilarious
"Twitter is better than any other IOT platform on the planet."
@edent
@thingmonk
"You can store loads of data on twitter without paying."
One thought on “The (Connected) House Of Horrors”
Trackbacks and Pingbacks
[…] delivered a version of his “The (Connected) House of Horrors” talk. A packed tent listened to him wax lyrical on the security perils of all things IoT. […]
What links here from around this blog?