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Apple, Google and Amazon seek standard for smart devices

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Amazon.com Inc.’s Echo Spot device, powered by its Alexa digital assistant, is seen at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January. | AFP-JIJI
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Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Amazon.com Inc. — three of the biggest providers of smart-home and voice-assistant technology — are joining forces to make internet-connected homes easier to set up and safer to use.

The rivals announced Wednesday that they’re working with the Zigbee Alliance — a foundation that promotes standards for the “internet of things” — and its members, including Samsung Electronics Co., Somfy SA and IKEA, on a new standard that will ensure their products work with one another.

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More parts of the home can now be controlled by voice-activated speakers or remote apps, from thermostats to lights and even refrigerators.

But “the lack of an industry-wide connectivity standard leaves people confused and frustrated when trying to understand what devices work with each smart home ecosystem,” wrote Nik Sathe and Grant Erickson, engineers at Google’s Nest unit, in a statement. “It also places a heavy burden on manufacturers to make sure all devices are compatible with each other.”

Amazon and Google have relatively open systems already, which have allowed tens of thousands of third-party devices to link up with their smart speakers. Apple only supports a few hundred via its HomeKit standard. The global smart home market is projected to grow to $174.2 billion by 2025, according to MarketWatch, up from $55.7 billion in 2016.

But the moves could also raise privacy and security questions.

For years, Amazon and Google collected data every time someone used a smart speaker to turn on a light or lock a door, and asked gadget-makers like Logitech Co. to send a stream of information when similar actions were performed.

Bringing more devices together in a home raises the prospect of personal data being shared with a higher number of companies, some of which may have more lax security or privacy standards.

Google pared back the number of companies its Nest devices connect with earlier this year due to privacy concerns.

Apple said the collaboration is built around “a shared belief that smart-home devices should be secure, reliable, and seamless to use.”

After lagging behind Amazon and Google, Apple is rebooting its smart-home efforts, developing new software and devices with a new team, Bloomberg reported earlier this year.

The alliance is aiming to have its new joint protocol ready by the end of 2020.

Notably absent from the group is Facebook Inc. The social network’s smart-home offering, called Portal, doesn’t have a third-party ecosystem like Apple and the others. Facebook’s voice assistant is also the most rudimentary on the market and uses Amazon’s Alexa to power many voice operations. Major Asian smart-home companies like Baidu Inc., Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s Tmall and Xiaomi Corp. are also missing.

Trade tensions between China and the U.S. could make such partnerships uncomfortable, and Google and Amazon don’t have much of a presence for smart speakers in the region.

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