Close Menu
geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    What's Hot

    Android 17 QPR1 Beta 3 New Features & Changes

    May 24, 2026

    The Download: coding’s future, the ‘Steroid Olympics,’ and AI-driven science

    May 24, 2026

    AION consortium set to build French AI Gigafactory

    May 24, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Instagram
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    • Home
    • UK Tech News
    • AI
    • Big Data
    • Cyber Security
      • Cloud Computing
      • iOS Development
    • IoT
    • Mobile
    • Software
      • Software Development
      • Software Engineering
    • Technology
      • Green Technology
      • Nanotechnology
    • Telecom
    geekfence.comgeekfence.com
    Home»IoT»Smart home growth increases enterprise security risks
    IoT

    Smart home growth increases enterprise security risks

    AdminBy AdminOctober 29, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Smart home growth increases enterprise security risks
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    For CIOs and CISOs, the growth of IoT and AI in the “smart home” is becoming a key enterprise security challenge. With a remote workforce now the norm for many organisations, it’s expanding the traditional enterprise attack surface.

    Research from IoT analyst firm Berg Insight shows that the number of smart homes across Europe and North America hit 139.4 million in 2024. That data quantifies a mainstream shift in technology that enterprise leaders need to watch.

    North America leads, with 45 percent of all households (66.7 million homes) having at least one smart product. Europe, while catching up, has 72.7 million smart homes, hitting 31 percent market penetration.

    These households are not just installing gadgets; they are installing complex whole-home systems. At the end of 2024, the installed base for these systems stood at 64.4 million in North America and 46.4 million in Europe. In North America, security providers like ADT and Vivint drive this, while in Europe, DIY solutions from firms like Shelly or Verisure are more common.

    But no matter who provides the smart home system, the growth to over 100 million households is generating exabytes of data on human behaviour, energy use, and physical security. For an enterprise leader, this signals that the underlying platforms for security and automation are maturing fast.

    This data is the raw material for the next generation of AI services, and the skills being honed in the consumer space are directly transferable to the enterprise. The insights derived from consumer behaviour today actively shape the AI models that enterprise platforms, from Google Vertex AI to AWS, will offer to businesses tomorrow.

    This explosive growth creates a volatile mix. When an employee connects a corporate laptop to a home Wi-Fi network crowded with consumer IoT devices – often with default passwords and patchy firmware – the corporate perimeter simply dissolves. CISOs now face a “branch of one” environment that is inherently untrusted.

    The smart home market’s growth is being fuelled by tangible benefits, not just novelty, which offers a key lesson for enterprise adoption.

    As Martin Apelgren, Principal Analyst at Berg Insight, commented: “Smart home product categories that provide tangible benefits and value for households are anticipated to grow faster than segments where the value proposition is weak.”

    Enhanced safety, cost-savings, and time-savings are the primary drivers of the smart home market’s growth.

    This consumer-driven focus on a clear return on investment mirrors the challenge facing CIOs. A CFO is unlikely to approve a large-scale AI rollout – perhaps using platforms from IBM or Salesforce – without a clear, demonstrable link to efficiency or risk mitigation.

    The next wave of this transformation is explicitly AI-driven. AI will move home systems beyond simple automation to predictive and adaptive environments.

    CISOs must use this smart home data to mandate a full-scale review of remote work security for their enterprise. This reinforces the urgent need to accelerate a zero-trust architecture that assumes the local network is always compromised.

    Staff who use seamless, predictive, and AI-driven environments at home will have little tolerance for clunky and disconnected enterprise systems. The pressure to modernise the digital employee experience is now coming from the outside world, not just internal surveys.

    For their part, CTOs and Chief Data Officers can look to growth of the consumer IoT and smart home market as a high-speed laboratory for AI and data governance. Monitoring this space provides insights into which technologies truly scale and what “value” really means to an end-user.

    As more businesses look to build their own “smart” enterprise environments, the security lessons and experiences from these 139 million homes are too valuable to ignore.

    See also: How Amazon is using AI and IoT to help its workforce

    Banner for IoT Tech Expo by TechEx events.

    Want to learn more about IoT from industry leaders? Check out IoT Tech Expo taking place in Amsterdam, California, and London. The comprehensive event is part of TechEx and is co-located with other leading technology events including the Cyber Security Expo. Click here for more information.

    IoT News is powered by TechForge Media. Explore other upcoming enterprise technology events and webinars here.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Ericsson and Net Feasa bring 5G IoT connectivity to container ships

    May 22, 2026

    A Really Good New Use Case for Animatronic Robots: Scare the Bears!

    May 21, 2026

    Restoring a Vintage Sun Engine Analyzer to Diagnose Old Cars

    May 20, 2026

    Innovating at the Speed of Business: Announcing the Customer Achievement Awards AMER 2026 Finalists 

    May 19, 2026

    Akamai on what enterprise AI needs at the edge

    May 16, 2026

    Data Centers Will Surge – Connected World

    May 15, 2026
    Top Posts

    Understanding U-Net Architecture in Deep Learning

    November 25, 202546 Views

    Hard-braking events as indicators of road segment crash risk

    January 14, 202629 Views

    Redefining AI efficiency with extreme compression

    March 25, 202627 Views
    Don't Miss

    Android 17 QPR1 Beta 3 New Features & Changes

    May 24, 2026

    Summary created by Smart Answers AIIn summary:Tech Advisor reports that Google released Android 17 QPR1…

    The Download: coding’s future, the ‘Steroid Olympics,’ and AI-driven science

    May 24, 2026

    AION consortium set to build French AI Gigafactory

    May 24, 2026

    Building Context-Aware Search in Python with LLM Embeddings + Metadata

    May 24, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    About Us

    At GeekFence, we are a team of tech-enthusiasts, industry watchers and content creators who believe that technology isn’t just about gadgets—it’s about how innovation transforms our lives, work and society. We’ve come together to build a place where readers, thinkers and industry insiders can converge to explore what’s next in tech.

    Our Picks

    Android 17 QPR1 Beta 3 New Features & Changes

    May 24, 2026

    The Download: coding’s future, the ‘Steroid Olympics,’ and AI-driven science

    May 24, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2026 Geekfence.All Rigt Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.