Category Archives: Cool Things

11 smart crowdfunding campaigns you may want to back this week


Every Friday, we’re taking a look at some of the smartest, most innovative projects that have caught our attention on Kickstarter and Indiegogo over the last seven days. 


Voltera

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This conductive ink printer will let you go create circuit boards in less than an hour. Voltera is currently seeking $70,000 on Kickstarter.

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This LED lighting system lets you add shining colors and special lighting effects to your home garden with one tap of your finger. The MIPOW team is currently seeking $10,000 on Kickstarter.

ENTACUP

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These smart cups are bringing loved ones together through a series of sensors, Bluetooth 4.0, an LED strip and a little bit of coffee. When one cup is filled, the other will glow. ENTACUP is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

Tempi

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This small wearable Bluetooth device can accurately measure temperature and humidity, as well as display the data on your smartphone. Simply pair Tempi with your phone and begin tracking your environment. The Vencipio team is currently seeking $20,000 on Kickstarter.

BROOGS

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This multi-purpose, Bluetooth-enabled smart lamp can serve as a lantern, speaker and mobile notification center, among many other things. BROOGS is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

KegSmarts

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This Wi-Fi-enabled device can attach to an existing beer fridge or part of PicoBrew’s kegerator unit to give you readings on exactly what’s happening with your brew via its OLED screen. PicoBrew is currently seeking $100,000 on Kickstarter.

InBody Band

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This snap-on device features a simple touchscreen display and four sensors located on its front and back that allow you to retrieve a body composition reading in just seconds. InBody is currently seeking $50,000 on Kickstarter.

Coolest Clock

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This highly-versatile projection clock is designed to project a lot more than time. Coolest Clock is currently seeking $20,000 on Indiegogo.

RasPiO Duino

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This add-on board is allowing Makers to experience the capabilities of Arduino right on a Raspberry Pi. RasPiO Duino is currently seeking £3,456 on Kickstarter.

ELECTRICMOOD

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This light, foldable and fully-equipped urban e-scooter hopes to shake up the portable transportation mark. ELECTRICMOOD is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

tago arc

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This wearable band is putting a customizable curved e-ink screen right on your wrist. Liber8 Technology is currently seeking $40,000 on Indiegogo.

Did you happen to miss last week’s notable campaigns? If so, you can check them out there.

Report: 720,000 Android Wear devices shipped in 2014


Motorola’s Moto 360 led the pack in sales for Android Wear devices last year, a new report reveals.


According to the latest report from research firm Canalys, over 720,000 Android Wear-based devices were shipped in 2014, making up 16% of the total 4.6 smart wearable bands sold. Over the 12-month span, the [MXT112S powered] Motorola Moto 360 led the pack among other companies, while LG’s round G Watch R performed significantly better than its original G Watch, and Asus and Sony entered the market with their own Android Wear devices.

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Outside of the Android ecosystem, Pebble shipped a total of one million units from its 2013 launch through to the end of 2014. Continual software updates, an increase in apps, and price cuts in the fall were among the key factors in helping to maintain strong sales in the second half of the year. Meanwhile, Fitbit remained the global leader in the basic wearable band market.

Following a completely different strategy to other vendors, Xiaomi shipped over a million units of its Mi Band, the colorful and affordable basic device. As Canalys notes, this included one day of sales of over 103,000 units.

“Though the Mi Band is a lower-margin product than competing devices, Xiaomi entered the wearables market with a unique strategy, and its shipment volumes show how quickly a company can become a major force in a segment based solely on the size of the Chinese market,” explained Canalys Research Analyst Jason Low.

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All eyes will now turn to Apple as the market awaits the arrival of its new smartwatch this April. The research firm points out that the product will dramatically grow the market for smart bands and wearables overall.

“Apple made the right decisions with its WatchKit software development kit to maximize battery life for the platform, and the Apple Watch will offer leading energy efficiency,” said Canalys Analyst Daniel Matte. “Android Wear will need to improve significantly in the future, and we believe it will do so.”

“Ironically, it could be the Apple Watch launch that determines the future of Google’s platform, and the degree to which OEMs back it,” writes TechCrunch’s Darrell Etherington. “While it’s designed as a competitor to what Android is doing with its own wearable platform, its presence in the press and in consumer minds could encourage more Android device owners to look around for their own equivalent, considering the other option is switching platforms altogether. Even if initial comparisons greatly favor Cupertino’s wrist-based computer, long-term, Android Wear could benefit.”

Android Wear became much more plentiful in the latter half of 2014. However, the numbers likely have OEMs watching and waiting to see how the market evolves from here, given that there’s already price pressure on some of these.

Interested in reading more? You can find the report here.

SIGFOX raises $115M to expand Internet of Things network globally


New funding will help accelerate SIGFOX’s worldwide network rollout in Europe, Asia and the U.S. with the support of leading telecom operators.


French startup SIGFOX, which has quickly become one of the world’s premier provider of cell networks dedicated to the Internet of Things (IoT), announced that it has secured a record $115 million round of financing from strategic and financial investors in Europe, the U.S. and Asia.

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Incorporated in 2009, SIGFOX has pioneered the Low-Power Wide-Area (LPWA) connectivity space and has become a reference player in IoT. The company builds low-energy, low-cost wireless networks to connect objects, such as electricity meters, smartwatches and appliances, providing the infrastructure that makes the IoT possible. And it couldn’t come at a better time either. In fact, analysts predict anywhere between 20 to 40 billion new smart devices to become embedded with sensors and microcontrollers to be Internet-enabled in the coming years.

“This funding will demonstrate that we can work with other partners to provide a network that will help us achieve our vision of a world with more connected devices,” Sigfox CEO Ludovic Le Moan told VentureBeat in a recent interview. “It was not easy when we started to raise this round because we didn’t know what the market would be like.”

According to Reutersthis is the third time since its inception that the startup has turned to investors to finance its growth, as it looks to rollout its network in 60 countries within the next five years. This strategic investment, which includes leading mobile network operators, clearly demonstrates how SIGFOX’s two-way low-throughput network complements existing high-bandwidth networks. The company sees a clear path towards unifying them into a single network, enabling always-efficient connectivity from both energy and throughput standpoints.

Following the deployment in France, Spain, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and soon the United States, SIGFOX will use this new equity round to accelerate its worldwide network rollout in Europe, Asia and the Americas with the support of international telecom operators like Telefonica, SK Telecom and NTT DOCOMO Ventures, as well as a leading financial sponsor and a number of industrial partners.

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“This record $115 million round is a significant step in the development of our network’s coverage all around the world. The trust of our investors and the dynamism of SIGFOX’s team allow us to strengthen our position as the world leader in IoT communications,” explained Anne Lauvergeon, SIGFOX’s Chairman.

SIGFOX’s network technology is inexpensive, consumes little power and works over long distances. While they may be able to undercut mobile operators, who are counting on billions of connected objects to justify their investments in new cellular networks, the French startup tells the Wall Street Journal that it hopes to instead make telecommunications companies its allies.

“Since creating the LPWA space three years ago, SIGFOX has become the leading global solution for IoT connectivity,” added Le Moan. “This investment round recognizes those achievements and highlights the company’s potential to become the worldwide standard for small-message-based connectivity.”

This is certainly an exciting time for our friends at SIGFOX, who have been present in a number of our event booths over the last couple years. What’s more, the startup recently teamed with Atmel to name the ATA8520 device its first SIGFOX Ready-certified system-on-chip (SoC) solution. The combination of the new ATA8520 SoC and SIGFOX’s scalable, high-performance network offer industry-leading wireless performance and ultra-low power consumption in a cost-effective solution for wireless networking applications operating in the sub-GHz band.

Interested in learning more? Head over to the company’s official page here.

5 smart crowdfunding campaigns you may want to back this week


Every Friday, we’re taking a look at some of the smartest, most innovative projects that have launched on Kickstarter and Indiegogo in the last seven days. 


Paragon Induction Cooktop

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Designed to ease sous-vide cooking for the masses, this smart induction hotplate pairs with a wireless sensor to precisely monitor and maintain temperatures. The FirstBuild team is currently seeking $50,000 on Indiegogo.

CarVi

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This mountable device is bringing a virtual driving system to older vehicles by simply connecting to a user’s smartphone. CarVi is currently seeking $100,000 on Indiegogo.

Sophia

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The smart skipping rope, Sophia counts how active you are and makes it easy to get more exercise during the day. FitFox is currently seeking €28,500 on Kickstarter.

Keepbo

Keepbo

A combination of ‘keep’ and ‘robot,’ this wireless button can track, locate and notify users of a lost item or child in real-time. Keepbo is currently seeking $30,000 on Indiegogo.

Neoh

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Billed as the first wearable home theater system, the headphones provide a spatial sound simulation using embedded motion sensors. Neoh is currently seeking $80,000 on Kickstarter.

Did you happen to miss last week’s notable campaigns? If so, you can check them out there.

Report: 40% of business leaders expect the IoT to affect their organization in 3 years


 The IoT will have a significant or transformational impact on businesses over the next three years.


Nearly in 4 in 10 organizations expect the Internet of Things (IoT) to transform their business or offer significant new revenue and cost-savings opportunities over the next three years, according to a new study by Gartner. More so, the research firm found approximately 60% of enterprises believe the IoT will offer cost-saving opportunities in the long term.

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The survey, which was carried out in October 2014 among a Gartner-managed panel, was composed of 463 IT and business leaders who had knowledge of their organization’s IoT strategy. However, the research did find that many of their companies have not yet established clear business or technical leadership for their IoT efforts.

“The survey confirmed that the IoT is very immature, and many organizations have only just started experimenting with it,” explained Gartner Vice President Nick Jones. “Only a small minority have deployed solutions in a production environment. However, the falling costs of networking and processing mean that there are few economic inhibitors to adding sensing and communications to products costing as little as a few tens of dollars. The real challenge of the IoT is less in making products ‘smart’ and more in understanding the business opportunities enabled by smart products and new ecosystems.”

A useful indicator of the degree to which organizations are prepared for the IoT is whether they’ve identified technical and business leadership for their IoT efforts. The study found that less than one-quarter of respondents have established clear business leadership for the IoT, either in the form of a single organizational unit owning the issue or multiple business units taking ownership of separate IoT efforts.

“While a single leader for the IoT is not essential, leadership and vision are important, even in the form of several leaders from different business units,” said Steve Kleynhans, Gartner Research Vice President.

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Furthermore, just over one-third (35%) of respondents who expect the IoT to have a significant or transformational impact are often working for organizations have some form of established leadership in place. Many survey respondents felt that the senior levels of their organizations don’t yet have a good understanding of its potential impact; yet, it’s important to note that attitudes toward the IoT vary widely by industry. For example, board of directors’ understanding of the IoT was rated as particularly weak in government, education, banking and insurance, whereas the communications and services industries scored above-average ratings for senior executive understanding of the IoT.

Security and privacy are, unsurprisingly, top issues and industries dealing with intangibles were more concerned with security and privacy than those dealing with tangibles because many operate in very security-aware areas such as banking,” Jones added.

Last year, Gartner projected over 20% of enterprises will have digital security services for business initiatives using IoT devices by 2017. The firm also forecasted that the IoT will be comprised of 26 billion devices, generating over $300 billion in incremental revenue in the next five years. Not to mention, 50% of all IoT solutions will originate from startups less than three years old.

Nonetheless, Gartner did admit that experts will soon begin to emerge within enterprises. “We expect that over the next three years, more organizations will establish clear leadership, and more will recognize the value of some form of an IoT center of excellence because of the need to master a wide range of new technologies and skills,” Kleynhans concluded.

Interested in learning more? You can find the entire study from Gartner here. Meanwhile, you can discover the latest in the Internet of Things here.

Puzzlebox Orbit takes flight on All-American Makers


It was most mind-blowing (or controlling) episode yet! 


Given the ubiquity of DIY culture today, it’s no surprise that the Maker Movement has hit primetime with the debut of Science Channel’s new series All-American MakersIn case you haven’t had the chance to tune-in yet, the premise of the show is to give innovators and entrepreneurs an opportunity to pitch their ideas in return for funding and help being brought to market.

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The ABC Shark Tank-like show for the engineering and Maker savvy, which stars Printrbot founder Brook Drumm, roboticist Brian Roe and venture capitalist Marc Portney, airs on Wednesday nights at 10 p.m. ET. Most recently, the panelists were presented with the Puzzlebox Orbit — a mind-controlled, ATmega328 powered helicopter — by Joshua Macias and Steven Castellotti, both of whom you may have seen in our Maker Faire Bay Area booth in previous years. If you recall, the Bay Area-based company also took to Kickstarter way back in 2012, where it successfully garnered over $74,000.

While you may see neighborhood kids, or even adults for that matter, playing with remote-controlled helicopters in their yards today, the remote control that operates that toy may soon take a back seat — thanks to Puzzlebox. The startup recently created a toy ‘copter they call Orbit that is capable of being controlled through brainwaves via an electroencephalography (EEG) headset that reads electrical activity along the scalp and communicates to the device over Bluetooth. The company’s software then extracts and visualizes those brainwaves in real-time, issuing command signals to the Orbit via an infrared adapter.

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“Just weeks into its freshman run on the Science Channel, the network’s new series All-American Makers has highlighted some pretty fun tech, but Wednesday’s episode might have some of the coolest yet,” Mashable’s Sandra Gonzalez writes. And, having been able to play around with Orbit, we must agree. It’s mind-blowing!

If you missed the show’s latest episode, you can check out the team’s pitch here. Meanwhile, you can also read a recent blog post from Castellotti on Bits & Pieces. 

Video: Watch this little robot ski down a hill


Who said humans should have all the fun in the snow? 


So, this blog may be a little premature for our usual Futuristic Friday posts, however we couldn’t help ourselves. As our friends in Northern California, Colorado or New England hit the slopes, they may soon be joined by a few friendly, pint-sized robots. That’s because University of Manitoba Autonomous Agents Laboratory just taught a humanoid how to ski.

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Jennifer — who has demonstrated her athletic ability before having played both hockey and soccer — was equipped with a pair of custom wooden skis and two poles. While the open-source robot has already proven capable of climbing walls, running and conquering an obstacle course, her latest challenge was alpine and cross-country skiing as part of the lab’s project for the 2015 DARwIn-OP Humanoid Application Challenge.

The team took to snow to test out the humanoid’s skills in both cross-country and alpine skiing. According to the lab, the control of the alpine skiing was their primary focus, along with improving the cross-country gait. After all, different kinds of snow have different effects on cross-country skiing.

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“This is the latest extension of our work furthering our research into dynamic balancing and walking under realistic conditions. The changing nature of snowy ground, and the rapid control response required by alpine skiing, present significant challenges to gait design and dynamic balancing in Humanoid Robots, as does the challenge of operating this equipment in cold weather,” the team writes.

In addition, the team set out to have the robot dynamically switch from cross-country to alpine skiing when it detected a change in inclination. In doing so, the robot must deal with uneven surfaces and the gravity pulling it rapidly downhill, while also figuring out how to properly react to these forces. Not to mention, the snow can wreak havoc with Jennifer’s vision-based systems.

The 2015 DARwIn-OP Humanoid Application Challenge will be held in Seattle this May. Until then, be sure to watch the robot traverse the snowy terrain and down a little bunny slope below. Winter Olympics 2018, anyone?

Alibaba becomes the latest company to test drone deliveries


It’s a bird… It’s a plane… It’s a tea-delivering drone! 


When it comes to the concept of delivery by drone, what’s not to love? Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant, has now begun testing drones for one-hour deliveries in China, following in the footsteps (or should we say air tracks) of other companies like Amazon, Google and DHL.

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The one-off test, which was in collaboration with Shanghai YTO Express Logistics, was announced on Alibaba’s Taobao shopping website showing a drone quickly delivering a packet of ginger tea to a woman who apparently needed tea in a jiffy. All together, the trial will transport supplies to 450 customers in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou over a three-day period between February 4-6, 2015.

What’s more, Alibaba claims that its 49-renimbi ginger tea packets will be delivered within an hour. As CNBC reports, the drones won’t land directly on a consumer’s front door, but outside a residential buildings instead. There, the package will be collected by human couriers who will complete the remaining part of the delivery process.

“By conducting the trial, Taobao and YTO Express officials aren’t hinting that drone-delivery service is ripe for commercialization,” the Alizila blog post explained. “Aviation authorities in China and the U.S. are pondering regulations to govern such activities.”

Regulation is also very strict in China, and operators of drones must first seek permission from the Civil Aviation Administration before piloting the flying device. Like Amazon, Alibaba would first have to abide by numerous regulations if it wanted to truly roll out a broader drone delivery system.

Door-to-door courier service is just one of many applicable uses of these unmanned aerial vehicles — many of which powered by AVR microcontrollers — and rely upon real-time apps. As our friends at PubNub reveal, no matter what the use case is, you need a way to signal and control those drones in real-time. With PubNub Data Streams, you can send and receive data between IoT embedded devices and microcontrollers, enabling Internet of Things developers to build interactive and powerful UAV applications.

Report: Half a billion wearables to be in use by 2019


Cisco projects an 18-fold jump in mobile traffic from wearable devices by 2019. 


While wearables are still undergoing a shift from niche to mainstream, Cisco predicts the rapidly-growing popularity of the devices will surge over the next few years. According to the company’s Visual Networking Index report, there will be more than half a billion wearable devices in use every day come 2019. Evident by the sheer volume of manufacturers both big and small seen throughout CES 2015, paired with the upcoming launch of the Apple Watch and the rising use in Android Wear devices, it seems inevitable that the world will soon enter a state of ubiquity when it comes to body-adorned technology.

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In fact, Cisco forecasts that 578 million wearable devices will be in use around the over the next four years, up from just 109 million last year. That’s a fivefold increase, but more enormously, the flooding of units will result in 18 times the amount of mobile data traffic. However, a majority of that information will filter through users’ smartphones. Global traffic from wearable devices will account for 1.1% of total mobile data traffic by 2019, compared to 0.6% at the end of last year.

Of course, Cisco’s number doesn’t just refer to smartwatches, it encompasses items like wearable cameras and scanners, smart glasses, heads-up displays, health monitors, fitness trackers, electronic clothing, and so forth. Still, considering that wearable technology is a relatively new genre, the notion that 578 million of them will be strapped onto people’s bodies in just four years time is rather impressive. Regionally, North America will have the largest regional share of wearables, with 33% share by 2019, while Asia Pacific will come in just below at 32%.

“The phenomenal growth in smarter end-user devices and M2M connections is a clear indicator of the growth of IoE, which is bringing together people, processes, data, and things to make networked connections more relevant and valuable,” Cisco explains. “Both M2M and wearable devices are making computing and connectivity very pervasive in our day-to-day lives.”

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In addition to the huge wearable increase, Cisco expects to see smartphone ownership continue to rise to 5.2 billion by 2019 — that’s nearly a billion more smartphone users than today. Naturally, as more people use the Internet on smartphones and wearables, data usage is also expected to rise dramatically. People used around just 30 exabytes of data in 2014, but that’s set to jump exponentially to 292 exabytes before 2020 arrives.

“Consider the impact that an 18-fold traffic growth could have on network architecture as myriad fitness trackers, smart watches, smart glasses, sports accessories and healthcare devices connect,” writes Rob Lloyd, Cisco President of Development and Sales. “Mind boggling? Maybe, but these consumer devices are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this explosion of connectivity. We expect the total number of connected things to reach 50 billion by 2020 – almost six times the forecast number of connected mobile and wearable devices combined.”

Indeed, almost half a billion (497 million) mobile devices and connections were added in 2014 alone, while global mobile devices and connections last year grew to 7.4 billion, up from 6.9 billion in 2013. Smartphones accounted for 88 percent of that growth, with 439 million net additions in 2014. In 2014, on an average, a smart device generated 22 times more traffic than a non-smart device.

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“But note one thing: this isn’t just about the Internet coping with a large volume of new connections. Networks need to get smarter so that they are capable of creating dynamic connections, delivering the right service to the right person or device, and identifying – from among the trillions of packets of digitized information flowing across them – the precise pieces of data which can keep a product delivery on time, win a customer or keep citizens safe,” Lloyd adds. “The network is the platform on which everything digital will connect.”

By the end of 2014, the number of mobile-connected devices will exceed the number of people on earth, and come 2019, there will be nearly 1.5 mobile devices per capita. Overall, there will be 11.5 billion mobile connections by this time. Of those, 8.3 billion will come from personal mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets and laptops. The remaining 3.2 billion connections will stem from M2M communications, which Cisco places smartwatches, wireless wearable cameras and fitness trackers in this category.

By 2019, Cisco predicts that more than 69% of the world’s population will use mobile devices.That’s around 5.2 billion people out of a forecasted population of 7.6 billion. As you can imagine, the increase in mobile users will lead to an uptick in global wireless data traffic, which Cisco anticipates a tenfold increase over the next four years. Last year global wireless data traffic tallied 30 exabytes. That figure should reach 292 exabytes by 2019, Cisco stated.

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More than half of all traffic from mobile-connected devices will be offloaded from to a fixed network by means of Wi-Fi devices and small-cell networks each month by 2019, the company believes.

“Much mobile data activity takes place within users’ homes. For users with fixed broadband and Wi-Fi access points at home, or for users served by operator-owned femtocells and picocells, a sizable proportion of traffic generated by mobile and portable devices is offloaded from the mobile network onto the fixed network… Our mobile offload projections include traffic from both public hotspots as well as residential Wi-Fi networks.”

Want to read more? You can access the entire study here. The evolution of IoT, including wearables and mobile devices, is now at a point that it will require a comprehensively redesigned approach to security threats in order to ensure its continuous growth and expansion. With the amount of data on the rise how can we be sure to secure the Internet of Streams?

Security researcher discovers vulnerability in talking toy dolls


That doll just said what?! 


Vivid Toy’s best-selling doll My Friend Cayla has vulnerabilities which can be exploited by malicious hackers to make the talking toy say what they want remotely, which was first revealed by security researcher Ken Munro of Pen Test Partners in a recent interview with BBC News. While the actual flaw has not been disclosed, it is known to be in the pairing of Cayla with the mobile device.

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Cayla may appear to be like any other doll on the market today — 18” tall, blond hair, jean jacket, graphic t-shirt and pink skirt — but is equipped with a built-in speaker and a necklace that acts as a listening device. She uses uses speech recognition software and Google Translate technology to answer children’s questions, all while transmitting the words to an app on either an iOS or Android device. That device connects to Cayla via Bluetooth and relays what the child says, translates it into text and uses keywords to browse the web for a response.

BBC reached out to Vivid Toys regarding the vulnerability, who stated, “The hacking was an isolated example carried out by a specialist team – but nevertheless the company would take the information on board as it was able to upgrade the app used with the doll.”

The doll’s distributor had noted that if a child were to say a foul word or pose an question, it would refrain from answering with anything more than “That’s inappropriate” or “I don’t know.” However, as Munro’s research reveals, that she can be made to say much worse things to a child if hacked. For instance, Cayla closes out the interview warning, “Be careful parents. Who knows what I may say next?”

As mentioned in a recent Forbes writeup, a lack of security on the mobile app makes it rather easy for a hacker to change her stock responses from child-friendly platitudes to much more offensive content. An attacker would simply need to pair the dolly with their own device, Munro warns, either by quickly grabbing the toy or finding a way to remotely exploit the phone.

“We don’t think it would take much to turn her into a device to spy on and potentially interact with children. You would be well advised to make sure that she is switched off when not explicitly in use and make sure that the mobile device is secured with a strong PIN, also kept and patched up to date. In the longer term the manufacturer should apply a PIN for the Bluetooth pairing process, but we don’t think that can be done without a product recall.”

Coincidentally enough, Atmel resident security expert just examined the issue in-depth, highlighting that while some sort of IoT is possible without security, without security it would really just be a toy. And this incident proves just that… literally.

“Security matters because users must trust that the nodes are who they say they are (i.e. authentic). Additionally, confidentiality of the data is important to keep unauthorized third parties from getting the data and misusing it. Also, without data integrity mechanisms there is no way to ensure that the data have not been tampered with or corrupted. All three of these matter. A lot,” Boldt writes.