Sent from my iPad
On 9 Mar 2016, at 18:14, Eliot Lear <lear(_at_)cisco(_dot_)com> wrote:
Some time ago, Cullen pointed me to the case of a television that he would
like not to have access to the Internet, lest its microphone send stuff
upstream to the manufacturer.
You mean like the Amazon Fire voice search, which if not encumbered with IPR is
bound to turn up on the next iteration of sat boxes, cable boxes and digital
terrestrial boxes aka the television itself.
But let's stick to your concern for the moment. First, a great many devices
will have a limited number of uses.
They may have limited use in the mind of the original engineering team, or
probably product management team, but that does not mean they have limited use.
Think of all the uses that the accelerometer in a smart phone gets used for.
In these cases, there is little if any tussle, as Carsten put it. Printers
print.
Yes but they are, for example, also a lan monitor with a print out device.
There are lots of things you might want to do with that facility. Admittedly
some are good and some are bad, but the owner should decide, not the
manufacturer.
-Stewart