Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Nest Protect users get insurance discounts, Big Data concerns

Add as a preferred source on Google

The age of Big Data has come to the home — in the form of insurance discounts for smart home products like the Nest Protect smoke detector. And that Big Data is likely to come with security and privacy concerns.

Liberty Mutual and American Family Insurance Co. last week announced insurance discounts for customers in some states who use the Nest Protect communicating smoke and carbon monoxide detector.

Recommended Videos

The detectors can send data to the Nest Safety Rewards program about whether the detectors have batteries, are properly charged, connected to Wi-Fi, and in good working order. In return, customers who sign up for the program will receive discounts of 5 percent or more on their home insurance. For a consumer paying the national average annual premium of $1,034, the savings would be about $52, reports the Boston Globe.

Liberty Mutual has initiated its Smart Home Verified Discount program in Illinois, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Alabama, Maine, and Wisconsin. It’s a an evolution of Liberty Mutual’s Protective Devices discount program, which now includes specific discounts for smartphone-enabled smoke alarms as well as new water and theft protection technologies.

American Family Insurance offers its program in Minnesota and plans to expand into other states later this year. Both companies are offering their qualified customers a $99 Nest Protect smoke and carbon monoxide alarm for free.

Nest has also launched a new version of the Protect smoke detector, along with a line of product updgrades June 17. The original Nest Protect was recalled and required an update after it was discovered that the Nest Wave feature that allowed users to silence the alarm by waving their arms nearby could activate accidentally and cause a delay in sounding a true alarm.

Nest is the home automation subsidiary of Google, and already collects data from the many Nest Learning Thermostats on the market. Other devices that connect to Nest also do so through the cloud, so Google could be collecting data on a whole host of smart home systems.

protect-whiteSmart home devices from smart thermostats to digital door locks could provide data to insurance companies on how often homeowners are setting back their thermostats and locking their doors, for example. However, questions about smart home systems posing security risks if hackers target homes has been raised. Collecting data from homes also opens up privacy concerns, and there will be calls for regulations to make companies protect that information from cyberattacks.

Insurers already collect data from car devices and offer discounts to homes with security systems. Where the pros and cons of connected smart home systems falls in anyone’s guess, but you can bet buckets of Big Data, and the concerns that come with it, will be involved.

Steve Castle
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Steve Castle’s fascination with technology began as a staff writer for luxury magazine Robb Report, where he reported on…
Google just made Gemini for Home a lot better at running your smart home
Google just updated Gemini for Home with smarter features and faster controls.
Google-gemini-for-home-updates

If you have a Google smart display or speaker at home, there are new updates you should know about. Google has rolled out a fresh batch of improvements to Gemini for Home, making the assistant noticeably smarter and faster across smart speakers and displays.

Gemini for Home is getting smarter and more personal

Read more
Pet tech is ridiculous, and I hate how badly I want it
Smart feeders, GPS collars, pet cameras, and health trackers all feel like anxiety with Wi-Fi. The annoying part is that some of them might actually help
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

One of my cats recently caught some kind of bug, which meant a vet visit, blood tests, and about $135 poorer. After all that, it turned out to be a normal fever. Good news for the cat. Slightly humiliating news for the me who spent the next few hours wondering whether a gadget could've helped me panic more efficiently.

That's the problem with pet tech. It sounds ridiculous until life gives you one weird symptom, one missed meal, or one unusually quiet afternoon. There are feeders that portion meals from an app, collars that track escape artists, cameras that let owners spy on naps, and water fountains that monitor drinking habits because apparently even the bowl needed analytics.

Read more
This Google Home update is all about smarter automation
More control, more conditions, more real-world use.
Google Home Nest Automations Featured

Google isn’t just tweaking Google Home this time; instead, it’s quietly turning it into something far more capable. And the focus is clear: give users real control over how their smart homes behave.

What’s new in the Google Home update?

Read more