Thank you for registering for Parks Associates. We have sent a verification email to your email address along with your temporary password. Please verify your email address via the link in this email as soon as possible. The link expires in 60 minutes.
April 26, 2018
Consumers may be overestimating the security of home security. While 64% of American broadband households worry about security and privacy when they use their connected devices, 63% think the signals from their monitored homes are encrypted – though they usually are not, according to a whitepaper from Parks Associates.
The whitepaper, “Residential Security and Encryption: Setting the Standard, Protecting Consumers,” points out that encrypting signals is not a standard security industry practice. The white paper was sponsored by security system manufacturer Qolsys.
From the article "Consumers May be Overestimating the Security of Home Security" by Carl Weinschenk.
People living in only 1 in 10 homes with broadband are “very interested” in connected health services, like a personal health coach, a remote health monitoring app that connects to and notifies a heal...
Shifting into the set-top box market complements that strategy, since Statista Research estimates that 210.7 million set-top boxes will be shipped this year. But Facebook will arrive woefully late to...
Do consumers make the jump? Studies suggest that they do. The most recent Parks Associates study of Netflix's tiers, released in summer of 2018, showed a significant increase in the number of premium...
Roku (NASDAQ:ROKU) and Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) controlled 69% of the US streaming device market in the first quarter of 2019, according to Parks Associates. Between the first quarters of 2017 and 2019, R...
© 2023-2025 Parks Associates. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy
Design & Developed By Agency Partner Interactive
We use cookies in this website to give you the best experience on our site and show you relevant ads. To find out more, read our privacy policy and cookie policy .