Hi All
Once again a great piece of technology and suddenly it is being abused, without the owner realising it:
What did the sales person say, it is perfectly safe - until another feature is enabled or you did your last update?
Regards
Caute_cautim
@Caute_cautim I cannot recall the exact fact I want to mention but I seem to remember something about if the person next door taps into your wifi the ISP could actually have legal recourse and it make me wonder if the same thing might apply here. If tons of people access sidewalk then there is a higher load on the ISP to the benefit of Amazon without any compensation to the ISPs. I don't think anything ever became of it but just something I was reminded of.
John-
Think of this as a smart Sidewalk-enabled neighborhood, borrowing bandwidth from you and your neighbors. The more households that join this network, the bigger it gets.
We want better Wi-Fi, and it's annoying when our connected devices don't work. You don't want your outdoor lights, motion sensors or security cameras going offline.
But at what cost? The first question is just how much of your bandwidth Sidewalk uses. Amazon says the total monthly data is capped at 500MB per account or the rough equivalent of streaming 10 minutes of HD video.
I listen to Steve Gibson on Security Now, and his December 8 podcast was somewhat impressed with the tech involved. He did an exposition using the Amazon Sidewalk Privacy and Security Whitepaper (found at hxxps://m.media-amazon.com/images/G/01/sidewalk/final_privacy_security_whitepaper.pdf, take out the x's), and if you listen to Steve you're already aware he's a cautious chap.
That being said, there's not a single reason why I need or would benefit from Amazon's fleet of IoT devices. Having an enmeshed, relatively secure network of Amazon devices doesn't change my dismal opinion about the individual Amazon devices themselves (camera doorbells, smart speakers, towel dryers, hair magnets, smart doorstops, self-writing whiteboards... whatever).
Amazon Sidewalk is a feature that allows certain Amazon devices, such as Echo and Ring devices, to share a small portion of your internet bandwidth with nearby devices to improve connectivity. This feature is designed to create a low-bandwidth, shared network to help devices stay connected even if they are out of range of the user's home Wi-Fi.
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How could we ever live without the Ring doorbell??!
I propose the embrace of technology follows a parabola - we start as full manual neophytes; invest massively in time, intellect, and money in trying to automate our lives; and then, after experiencing enough failure, we realize the efficiency and elegance of simple (often manual) solutions.
This isn't to say we don't occasionally develop better mousetraps -- all hail the TV remote (just as long as it is not universal remote that is), but the signal to noise ratio is massive.
@JoePete wrote:I propose the embrace of technology follows a parabola
Others agree with you.... Gartner Hype Cycle.
Amazon Alexa App:
Settings:
Account Settings:
Amazon Sidewalk:
Disable Sidewalk: