Wednesday, 28 September 2016

10 Best Instant Printers 2016

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The dodgy fire door gallery 2016

Big gaps around the perimeter, appallingly slapdash use of sealant, doors wedged open despite signs warning explicitly against doing this, doors falling apart for want of proper maintenance…

We present to you now the dodgy fire door gallery 2016: an appalling assortment of terrible, shocking, neglected fire doors.

Courtesy of Fire Door Safety Week, which is running from 26 September to 2 October 2016, this horror show features pictures sent to Theodore Firedoor from concerned fire safety professionals and regular members of the public.

Raising awareness of the critical role fire doors play in protecting people and property and aiming to stamp out bad practice, the campaign is organised by the British Woodworking Federation, the BWF-Certifire Scheme and the Fire Door Inspection Scheme, in partnership with the Government’s safety campaign Fire Kills.

Check out the winners in the 2014 Dodgy Fire Door of the Year competion.

Scroll down below for the dodgy fire door gallery 2016!

crystal-maurizi pete-jones 2-handles-credit-fire-door-inspection-service 2015-09-18-16-52-16 972485_10152084317492577_1589846751_n 1371163_10152084324222577_794433506_n 1421388_10152084324247577_218017682_n 1454485_10152084317517577_23154088_n 1454506_10152084317502577_1820588547_n 1461942_10152084324262577_294518871_n


2015-09-18-17-00-02-3
2015-09-18-17-16-5520150421_05374920150630_07543220160608_133443cafe-chelmsford-credit-paul-grechcredit-kent-krauser-and-lori-greenefdis-fire-door-propped-openfire-door-propped-open-with-extinguisher-fss_firefire-door-wedged-open-50

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Dodgy fire doors exposed in secret footage [video]

Theodore Firedoor went undercover at a recently built UK school and a major city hospital to see if the fire doors complied with regulations.

To mark Fire Door Safety Week IFSEC Global brings you both these episodes, as well as an interview with the fire officer at Loughborough University. If you spot any dodgy doors in the buildings you visit or work in, then you can post your pictures or alert Thedore Firedoor to the problem on its Facebook page.

In episode one, below, the FDIS gap checker finds serious gaps in the doors, meaning smoke will pass through all too easily. There are also issues with door closers and creaky doors at this newly built school. One of the doors is actually BWF certified, but is nevertheless non-compliant thanks to shoddy installation and a lack of maintenance.

Episode two now and a building where fre safety is particularly critical: a hospital. The benefits of fire doors – that the passage of smoke is contained within the area the fire has started – are vital in this environment, where evacuation will unavoidably be slow. How dispiriting, then, that Theodore Fire Door Should uncover a “distinct lack of maintenance”, “impact damage”,  “heavy edge damage”, large gaps and missing intuescent seals

In episode three Theodore Firedoor interviews Rod Harrison, fire safety officer at Loughborough University, about his role in keeping fire doors well maintained and securing the cooperation of students in keeping doors closed.

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Tuesday, 27 September 2016

How to Pre-Wire a House for Security Cameras

how-to pre-wire house for security cameras

At CCTV Camera Pros, I frequently get asked by customers “what type of cable should I run to pre-wire my house for a security camera system?”

I wrote this article to help business and homeowners prepare to install a video surveillance system by answering that question and discussing some best practices in my experience. This guide is also useful even if you are beyond the pre-drywall phase of construction or if you are installing a security camera in a completely finished home.

If you are building a new home or remodeling one, the best time to wire your house for security cameras is before the drywall is installed. It will give you the most options for where you can run cable and completely conceal it. In addition to security cameras, you should think about if you want to display live video feeds from your cameras on a TV or other monitors in your house.

Here are some basic steps that I recommend to follow.

Step 1: What type of security camera cameras will you use?

First step is to decide whether you want to use IP cameras or CCTV cameras, because this will determine what type of cable you run.

CAT-5 cable is used to wire IP camera systems. Coax cable is typically used to wire CCTV cameras. Please note that when I say CCTV cameras, I am also referring to HD security camera systems that are wired using coax cable. These types of systems can use 1080p AHD cameras and TVI cameras.

If you are unsure the type of cameras you will install and want to decide later, run both types of cables: CAT-5 and RG59 Siamese coaxial cable to each camera location. It will not cost you much more and you may have use for the cable that you do not use later. Please note that you can also use video baluns to wire CCTV cameras with CAT-5 cable.

I currently recommend HD CCTV systems over IP camera systems. I  do not plan on going into the details of why in this article, but I will say that the quality of 1080p coax cameras is generally better than 1080p IP cameras, the price is lower, and they are easier to setup. Please email me if you would like to discuss HD CCTV vs IP cameras further.

Step 2: Where will you mount your cameras and monitors?

Next, decide where you want to mount your cameras. Also, think about if you want to display live video from your cameras on any TVs or monitors besides the one near your DVR. Last, consider if you want any other devices such as motion detectors or door sensors, which can be used to trigger alarms and recording on your DVR.

House Wiring Diragram for Security Camera

The above floor plan notes proposed locations for security cameras, a DVR, a power supply box, 3 outdoor motion detectors and 2 spot monitors. Whether you are at the pre-drywall phase of construction or not, I recommend planning your surveillance system by laying everything out like I did above.

In case you are not familiar, spot monitor is a term used in the video surveillance industry for TVs and monitors that will be used to display a live view of one of more cameras. You can learn more about spot monitors here.

All of the orange arrows note the proposed locations where security cameras will be installed. The DVR,  one monitor, and supply box will be located in the bedroom of the house that will be used as an office. Three outdoor PIR motion detectors are noted using the blue squares, and there will be a spot monitor in the family room and master bedroom.

Step 3: What type of cable should I use?

Camera Wiring

If you are going to use CCTV cameras or HD CCTV cameras, I recommend running RG59 Siamese coax cable from all of the camera locations to the DVR location on the office. Be sure to use RG59 cable that has a solid copper core. Steel core coax cables used for CATV do not work well for CCTV cameras.

If you are going to use network IP cameras, run CAT-5 cable to each camera location. If you can not decide what type of cameras to use at this time and you need to run cable so that construction can proceed, then run both cable types. A cable installer should not charge you double to run two cables. Obviously you need to buy both types of cable, but it should not cost you twice as much in labor to run 2 cables instead of 1.

Motion Detector Wiring

Motion detectors require two wires to connect to the alarm inputs of a DVR, plus you need to power them with another cable pair. You can use CAT-5 to run both the power and alarm connectivity. For the above project, I would run CAT-5 from all of the motion detector locations back to the DVR / power supply box location in the house. If you use motion detectors that require 12V DC, you can use the same 12V DC power supply box to power your surveillance cameras and the motion detectors.

You can learn more about how-to wire a motion detector to a surveillance DVR here.

Monitor / Spot Monitor Wiring

In the above installation, there will be a monitor located near the DVR in the office. This monitor will be used to configure / administer the DVR. There will be two spot monitors: one located in the family room and one in the master bedroom. No pre-wiring is required for the monitor in the office. This monitor is simply connected to the DVR using an HDMI or VGA cable.

For the two spot monitors, coax cable, CAT-5, or HDMI cable should be used depending on the spot monitor output(s) of your DVR. Some DVRs use a BNC composite output for spot monitors.. If this is the case, you should run RG59 or RG6 to each spot monitor location. If your DVR uses an HDMI connection for the spot monitor output, you need to decide if it is better for you to run an HDMI cable to each location or if you should run CAT-5.

HDMI cable is not very flexible and usually not practical to run long distances. For that reason, HDMI over CAT-5 systems are available. These consist of a small box that you attach on each end of a CAT-5 cable. These transmitter / receiver boxes each have a CAT-5 input and HDMI output on them.

If your DVR only has one HDMI spot monitor output, you will also need an HDMI splitter. Same goes for composite outputs, you need a CCTV video splitter if your DVR only has one spot monitor output and you want the signal to go to more than one TV / monitor.

Next Steps

When you are ready to connect your cable to your security cameras, DVR, and other devices, please take a look at our RG59 Siamese cable wiring guide for security camera systems.

 

 

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6 Best Full-Frame DSLR Cameras 2016

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6 Best Boy's Dress Coats 2016

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6 Best Belt & Disc Combo Sanders 2016

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Poorest in society at greatest risk from residential fires, research reveals

People on the lowest incomes tend to be the most vulnerable to the risk of residential fires, research launched during Fire Door Safety Week has revealed.

Just a third (35%) of the lowest income households who rent flats say they have been given information about an emergency fire plan for the building in which they live, compared to 88% of tenants whose incomes exceed £100,000 a year.

The research, which surveyed 1,001 tenants living in flats, also identified an income-related gulf in terms of perception of risk. Only 27% of those with incomes of £25,000 or less feeling safe from fire, compared to 44% of those earning above £80,000.

Twenty-two percent of rented households in the lowest income bracket who expressed fire safety concerns felt unable to move for financial reasons.

A majority of tenants of all incomes (58%) were unaware of the identity of their building’s ‘responsible person’ – the person responsible for fire safety in a given building under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. This figure rises above 70% for lower income tenants.

In more heartening news, 85% of all tenants living in blocks of flats with fire safety concerns have reported their concerns about fire safety.

If you see a problem, don’t walk past – that goes for doors that are wedged open, damaged or badly fitted. Report it to your building manager or landlord or to your local fire and rescue service.” Peter Holland CBE, Chief Fire and Rescue Adviser

“Fire safety in private and public sector rented housing, especially Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) and older, less well maintained blocks of flats, continues to be a serious challenge,” says Hannah Mansell. “Yet these are often homes for the people with the fewest choices about where they live and the least opportunity to move.

“We frequently see fire doors in blocks of flats in a poor state of repair; fire doors that won’t close; fire doors that have been wedged open. This is, of course, just one aspect of fire safety in these buildings, but good fire doors are often a sign of good fire safety generally. We are urging all tenants to carry out a simple 5-step fire door check as a matter of urgency, and to report any concerns to the responsible person, most likely their landlord, straightaway.”

Fire Door Safety Week, which runs from 26 September to 2 October 2016, sets out to raise awareness of the critical role that fire doors play in protecting property and saving lives and to stamp out bad practice. The campaign is organised by the British Woodworking Federation, the BWF-Certifire Scheme and the Fire Door Inspection Scheme, in partnership with the Government’s Fire Kills safety campaign .

Says Peter Holland CBE, the Government’s Chief Fire and Rescue Adviser: “Fire doors perform a vital role, but only if they are properly specified, installed, managed and maintained.

“The message is simple. If you see a problem, don’t walk past – that goes for doors that are wedged open, damaged or badly fitted. Report it to your building manager or landlord or to your local fire and rescue service.”

London Fire Brigade is seeking to redress this lack of awareness about the emergency plan through the Know The Plan campaign which targets tenants in high rise or purpose built blocks of flats.

Dan Daly, Assistant Commissioner for Fire Safety at London Fire Brigade, says: “Living in a high rise or purpose built block of flats is no more dangerous than living in a house, but it’s important to know that your fire plan should be different.

“If there is a fire elsewhere in the building but not inside your home you’re safer staying in your flat unless the flames, heat or smoke are affecting you.

“Flats and maisonettes are built to give you some protection from fire: a minimum of 30 minutes and up to 60. Walls, floors and well maintained fire doors will hold back flames and smoke for a time. If you leave your flat you could be rushing into choking smoke, the fire itself or firefighters using equipment to bring the fire under control in another part of the building.”

The survey was conducted by Atomik Research on behalf of Fire Door Safety Week.

Are you a tenant or a landlord? Find out more about fire doors and fire safety in residential buildings tenants on the Fire Door Safety Week website.

 

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Meet Oliver Stone’s go-to cyber consultant: the ethical hacker

Not many cyber security specialists moonlight as advisers to Hollywood directors with the pedigree of Oliver Stone.

Ralph Echmendia, the ‘ethical hacker’, who developed a secure online ticketing system for the family of Bob Marley and helped to investigate the early online leak of an Eminem album, has had a more interesting career than most of his counterparts.

In 2011, he was lead technical investigator on the premature leak of scenes from the then unreleased film Twilight: Breaking Dawn.

That was just the beginning in terms of his Hollywood associations because a year later Echemendia formed RED-E Digital, a consultancy offering the entertainment industry advise on how to protect pre-released content.

Oliver Stone, no less, was among those in the queue for Enchemendia’s services. The ‘ethical hacker’ has been a computer security consultant on two films directed by Stone, Savages and Snowden, and even made cameo appearances as an actor in both. Echemendia has also been a hacking consultant for the film Nerve.

Echemendia will draw on these fascinating experiences when he speaks at this year’s Customer Contact Expo about ‘Hacking Your Assets: The Price of Convenience’. This will take place at London Olympia on 28-29 September. Click here to register.

IFSEC Global spoke to Ralph about his career in advance of his forthcoming talk on cyber securuty at Customer Contact Expo.

IFSEC Global: What is the most enjoyable thing about being a cyber security professional?

Ralph Echmendia: To me it’s all about bringing awareness to how technology can be used and misused. The exchange of knowledge is crucial to our evolution. I must say collaborating with great minds in this space is also very enjoyable.

IG: What is the most frustrating thing about being a cyber security professional?

RE: That most of the time nothing really changes. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make the horse drink it. Too often the mistakes we see are things that we experts have been warning about for years.

IG: What is the most common mistake organisations make in dealing with cybercrime?

RE: Thinking too much in terms of security versus resilience. Nothing in life, much less cyberspace, can be absolute.

You cannot have 100% security. To identify a potential breach early enough for it not to affect your operations is or should be the focus. Focusing on preventing the breach is not the idea.

IG: Who is more inept and/or complacent about addressing the cyber threat in general and why – government, big business or small businesses?

RE: Unfortunately, all of the above. While their spending budgets and needs may differ, security is seen as a cost and not a value add. So often decisions are made that have an effect on the risk, not only business but also consumers.

Be more aware, ask questions, don’t be afraid to Google your questions. Don’t be intimidated by technology. You are smarter than a computer. Ralph offers advice on staying vigilant against the hacking threat

IG: Might the government and business sometimes be less blasé about protecting data (if indeed they are) if the general public weren’t so complacent about giving away their personal data?

RE: The issue of the public being complacent is an important one, but not one that really affects the way government and companies do security. Many of them have to follow regulatory compliance requirements, but being compliant to these does not mean ‘secure’.

The impact that all of this data will have on everyone is still not digestible to most. The more we rely on technology, the faster we will feel its effects.

IG: Traditional, non-digital crime has been in general decline across the western world for several decades for many reasons. Can you imagine us ever reaching that point with cybercrime or is that a forlorn hope?

RE: I don’t believe we will see a decline anytime soon. Cybercrime will continue for longer than we can speculate.

IG: What are your prescriptions in a nutshell for improving the prevailing approach to combating cybercrime?

RE: Be more aware, ask questions, don’t be afraid to Google your questions. Don’t be intimidated by technology. You are smarter than a computer.

IG: How did you get into the film industry?

RE: Initially because of my knowledge of music production environments and friendships with artists. When large copyright infringement or major breaches of content would take place, I became the go-to-guy. Not many of us have an understanding of both the logical/operational and creative/artist process.

IG: What are you most proud of in your work in TV and film and why?

RE: I’d have to say it has been my work with Oliver Stone on both Savages and Snowden.

For Snowden, I did much more than secure the digital assets on this film. I was heavily involved in the creative as well, working with great writers like Kieran Fitzgerald and, of course, Mr Stone. Other projects like Nerve and initial input into Mr. Robot were also things I feel blessed to have been a part of.

IG: You have advised on cybercrime for TV and film – have you ever been disappointed with the results? To what extent do they use creative license to exaggerate, downplay or outright invent things to suit the script?

RE: Well, let me say that ultimately, it’s the director’s decision, and it is entertainment. So it does happen.

I most certainly have seen films or TV shows that demonstrate the implausibility of such content. Luckily, not projects I have worked on.

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“Never more than 2-3 clicks from getting things done”: TDSi MD John Davies on the open-platform GARDiS

TDSi has doubled its R&D spend in the last two years as it prepares for one of its most important product launches of recent years.

A web-based, open platform GARDiS is charting a new course for the integrated security specialists that will define the “future of the business for the next 10-15 years.”

The company offered a sneak preview of the new platform for the first time at IFSEC 2016. IFSEC Global caught up with TDSi managing director John Davies to find out more, not just about GARDiS but also about the trends shaping the security market.

Davies, who recently won a BSIA Chairman’s Award for Contribution to Exports, says customers increasingly eschew proprietary platforms, that the access control industry remains conservative despite recent innovation, and that the cloud will transform the installation business model.

IFSEC Global: Hi, John. So you will shortly be launching the GARDiS platform?

John Davies: GARDiS will replace our EX-Series platform, which was launched in 2000/2001. Then in a year or 18 months’ time we will be looking to update the MICROgarde controller platform.

A lot of development is on the software side and linking systems to other business systems. We have OPC and Modbus engines to link into building management systems and command and control, or XML. There’s a lot of tools there to make it easier to integrate into anything.

On the hardware side, to my knowledge there’s only ourselves and Axis who have actually developed access control to the ONVIF profile A and C standard

Historically, access control systems – and most security systems – have been built on proprietary technologies. So with ONVIF profile S being so predominant in CCTV, ONVIF has also written profile A and C standards for access control. The IEC [International Electrotechnical Commission] has adopted them.

@TDSi_Access new Gardis product. Move into open platform #IFSEC2016 http://pic.twitter.com/ywAMHyg85g

— IFSEC Global Editor (@ifsecglobal) June 21, 2016

So the GARDiS hardware and software platforms that we’ve developed and are launching are compatible with ONVIF profile A and C.

What this means is a PSIM company like IMRON, Prysm or Synectic, if they’re using ONVIF A and C drivers in their software, can control our hardware. They don’t need our software.

It has a REST API as well, which enables us to interface into any other type of system. So we’ve really gone down the open platform rather than propriety route.

On the hardware side, to my knowledge there’s only ourselves and Axis who have actually developed access control to the ONVIF profile A and C standard. Then on the software side it’s designed for use on both premises in the server environment, or as a cloud-based system. So it’s our first foray into truly cloud-based access control.

IG: Where do you anticipate demand being strongest?

JD: I think it depends on the market segment. Large corporates or governments are still reluctant to have a lot of stuff in the cloud. They want that control.

But cloud is doing really well for mid-market customers.

It also allows installers to move away from an equipment sales and maintenance business model to just selling maintenance contracts. So installers are not actually selling equipment, but selling a three or five or seven year maintenance deal.

If you take the cloud to its natural conclusion it will change the business model of installers

IG: And is that maintenance actually becoming an easier job in the IP era?

JD: More and more these days systems are designed for remote diagnostics. So if there’s something wrong with it, it tells you before you get to the site. So if the control is faulty, you know you need to replace it.

It provides more intelligence into operating and maintaining these systems.

IG: So it really has profound implications for installers and integrators…

JD: If you take the cloud to its natural conclusion it will change the business model of installers. They will need to deal with leasing companies and finance companies to finance the installations.

But I think there is a revolution within the security industry as far as IT and networking skills are concerned – that’s already happening. IP CCTV has driven that. Most installers now are very familiar with networks.

A big part of the market is still on the mechanical locking side of things, but even that is changing with the likes of SimonsVoss, SALTO and ASSA ABLOY doing wireless locking products. So the humble lock is now becoming electrified and hooked onto the network.

The access control industry has been conservative, and I think still is. A lot of our competitors are still on proprietary systems

IG: Is the access control sector finally shedding its reputation as a conservative industry?

JD: When I came into the security industry 13 years ago from the telecoms world, I would have described the whole security industry as conservative with a small ‘c’.

Then IP came along and then PSIM. So the whole industry has been on a journey, pushed by CCTV.

The access control industry has been conservative, and I think still is. A lot of our competitors are still on proprietary systems.

We decided that we needed to open it up. Then if people want to use our software, it’s because it delivers a solution or is easy to use – not because you have to use it as the hardware won’t work without the software.

People can use our hardware with other people’s software. Naturally we would like customers to use TDSi, but it keeps us on our toes in trying to stay relevant.

IG: Where does this resistance to change in the industry come from?

JD: People want to own the customer rather than delivering a solution. But you can’t do that these days.

A lot of our competitors have a wireless hub interfacing with their controller, before it talks to the reader. For us, that wireless lock talks to its wireless hub, and that wireless hub talks straight to our software. It doesn’t need anything else.

So some of our competitors still have the mindset that “we’re in the business to sell controllers – that’s what we do. Therefore, we need to architect that system to make sure that the  controller is there.”

But from an engineer’s point of view it’s surplus to requirements. It’s not doing anything.

Does that mean you need to change the way you price things? Yes.

The way GARDiS is architected, we’ll always be able to introduce new functionality, features and connections into other systems because that’s how the software has been designed

You’re either part of the movement to change it, or you’re trying to resist change. If you try and resist change, you are unlikely to be successful in the long run.

Even the way software is written now is completely different. Gone are the days when you used to  spend months writing and testing code.

Now the process is ‘Agile’. You write a piece of software to do one thing, or one part of the thing. Write it, test it – then it’s done. Then you move onto the next bit. You’re constantly improving the software and bringing in new user stories and functionality.

The GARDiS platform today is just a basic access control platform. Over the next 12 months it will have all the whistles and bells of our EXgarde platform, which will fall by the wayside.

The way GARDiS is architected, we’ll always be able to introduce new functionality, features and connections into other systems because that’s how the software has been designed.

IG: Presumably this makes you much more responsive to customer feedback on how to improve the software?

JD: Exactly. Someone might say “it would be nice if you did that”. Then we ask: “OK, so how do you want that to work?” We look at the user experience, what the user is trying to achieve, then you tell the software team to write the code that achieves it.

So access control is still conservative, but we’re not!

It’s all about the user experience. That’s our goal with the GARDiS platform: you’re never more than two or three clicks away from getting anything done.

We’ve been writing the code now for over a year. We’ve invested heavily. We doubled our R&D spend over the last year, and the year before – because this is the future of the business for the next 10-15 years.

The next push is into the internet of things. Systems that learn from data rather than just delivering information.

 

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Monday, 26 September 2016

CCTV http://www.cctv

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Fire doors: watch this presentation to meet your RRO obligations and stay out of trouble

Watch this three-part CPD presentation on how to specify, install and maintain fire doors to meet your RRO obligations and make sure you eliminate the risk of a hefty fine or worse.

Courtesy of the BWF-CERTIFIRE Fire Door and Doorset Scheme, this is essential viewing for anyone involved in the specification, installation or maintenance of fire doors.

In part one, Jon Fletcher, scheme manager at the BWF-Certifire Fire Door and Doorset Scheme, explains why we need fire doors and what the regulations say.

In part two, the presenter moves on to how a fire door’s performance is determined and what certification means.

In the third and final part Jon Fletcher  talks about the BWF-CERTIFIRE scheme and the meaning of compatible components.

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Security trumps ease-of-use for smart-home consumers as market reaches critical mass

The smart home market has reached a tipping point in terms of adoption in some countries, a survey by prpl Foundation has revealed.

The Global Smart Home Security Report, the first in-depth survey of smart-home consumers by the non-profit, also found that consumers tend to prioritise security over usability.

But despite this widespread sentiment, along with an insistence that they’re prepared to take more responsibility for their cyber security, the Prpl foundation found that many users were still failing to follow best security practices.

“As is the case with so many things in life, what users say they would do and what they actually do fail to align, and this has to be down in large part to education,” said Cesare Garlati, chief security strategist for the prpl Foundation. “However, it is heartening to see consumer attitudes shifting somewhat and this is something the IoT industry in general would do well to take note of.”

Conducted through OnePoll, the survey canvassed 1,200 respondents in the US, UK, France, Germany, Italy and Japan on the IoT devices they had in their home and security measures people take (or fail to take) to secure their smart homes.

In terms of the number of smart devices per household the UK (2.6) and US (2.4) trail France (5.8 devices), Italy (5) and Germany (4.5) by some distance.

If that might surprise some commentators, they might be more surprised still that Japan, a famously technophile nation, has been even slower to embrace the internet of things, with an average of just one smart device per home.

Mainstream

“Little research has been done on a large enough scale to uncover the level of penetration of smart devices in the home, and more importantly, the security implications,” said Art Swift, president of the prpl Foundation.

“What we’ve uncovered is that the smart home is actually mainstream, as 83% confess to having connected devices, not including laptops, computers and smartphones, in use in their homes.  Game consoles, wireless printers and smart TVs were the most popular and yet security concerns have been raised about all three over recent years.

“Once it was established how pervasive smart technology in the home is, we also wanted to find out whether consumers are aware of the risks of the connected home and if homeowners would ultimately take responsibility for securing this new cyber domain, just as they would their physical front doors.”

The study also found that many users failing to secure their routers, which effectively act as a front door to a home’s entire network. Failure to patch vendor updates could open vulnerabilities through which hackers could eavesdrop on traffic and hijack smart devices.

The headline security related findings from the study are:

  • 43% of respondents admitted they had never updated their router firmware – in the case of 23%  of respondents this was because they didn’t even know it was possible. The other 57% said they updated the router firmware “at least once a year”
  • Many users thought Firewall ports must be open for their internet-connected home services to work. Not only is this untrue, said the Prpl  Foundation, but they pose a huge security risk and vector for attack. Nevertheless, 93% of consumers regularly leave one or more ports open on their router firewall.
  • 46% have never configured their router security settings

While security has arguably often been a second-order priority behind usability in consumer electronics, the prpl study shows that a resounding majority of consumers would prefer security to be prioritised over ease-of-use.

Some 60% of respondents said they think the home user should take ownership of securing their connected devices, while 20% thought the manufacturer should take responsibility, and another expecting the service provider to do it.

Over 40% of respondents would be happy to pay pay more for their devices in return for enhanced security.

The prpl Foundation, which was founded in 2012, is an open-source, community-driven, collaborative, non-profit foundation targeting and supporting the MIPS architecture — and open to others — with a focus on enabling next-generation datacenter-to-device portable software and virtualized architectures.

Smart home security tips

The prpl Foundation has compiled a list of top tips for more robust security in your smart or connected home:

  1. Regularly check for router firmware updates
  2. Change default password on router
  3. Configure firewall policies
  4. Enable MAC filtering
  5. Use guest network for guest devices
  6. Use guest network for home devices
  7. Disable UPnP
  8. Close all ports on your firewall

 

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