Get the latest tech news

A sociotechnical threat model for AI-driven smart home devices


The growing adoption of AI-driven smart home devices has introduced new privacy risks for domestic workers (DWs), who are frequently monitored in employers' homes while also using smart devices in their own households. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 18 UK-based DWs and performed a human-centered threat modeling analysis of their experiences through the lens of Communication Privacy Management (CPM). Our findings extend existing threat models beyond abstract adversaries and single-household contexts by showing how AI analytics, residual data logs, and cross-household data flows shaped the privacy risks faced by participants. In employer-controlled homes, AI-enabled features and opaque, agency-mediated employment arrangements intensified surveillance and constrained participants' ability to negotiate privacy boundaries. In their own homes, participants had greater control as device owners but still faced challenges, including gendered administrative roles, opaque AI functionalities, and uncertainty around data retention. We synthesize these insights into a sociotechnical threat model that identifies DW agencies as institutional adversaries and maps AI-driven privacy risks across interconnected households, and we outline social and practical implications for strengthening DW privacy and agency.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on Hacker News

Read more on:

Photo of Cameras

Cameras

Photo of Eye of Sauron

Eye of Sauron

Related news:

News photo

Factories Attach Cameras to Workers, in Hopes of Replacing Them With Robots

News photo

The Nationwide Backlash Against Cameras Watching Your Car

News photo

Cops Keep Getting Arrested for Using Flock's Cameras to Stalk People