Tuesday, October 4th 2022

Matter Arrives Bringing A More Interoperable, Simple And Secure Internet Of Things to Life

The Connectivity Standards Alliance, the international community of more than 550 technology companies committed to open standards for the Internet of Things, announced today the release of the Matter 1.0 specification and the opening of the Matter certification program. Member companies who make up all facets of the IoT now have a complete program for bringing the next generation of interoperable products that work across brands and platforms to market with greater privacy, security, and simplicity for consumers.

As part of the Matter 1.0 release, authorized test labs are open for product certification, the test harnesses and tools are available, and the open-source reference design software development kit (SDK) is complete - all to bring new, innovative products to market. Further, Alliance members with devices already deployed and with plans to update their products to support Matter can now do so, once their products are certified.
"What started as a mission to unravel the complexities of connectivity has resulted in Matter, a single, global IP-based protocol that will fundamentally change the IoT," said Tobin Richardson, President and CEO of the Connectivity Standards Alliance. "This release is the first step on a journey our community and the industry are taking to make the IoT more simple, secure, and valuable no matter who you are or where you live. With global support from companies large and small, today's Matter 1.0 release is more than a milestone for our organization and our members; it is a celebration of what is possible."

Over 280 member companies—including Amazon, Apple, Comcast, Google, Signify and SmartThings—have brought their technologies, experience, and innovations together to ensure Matter met the needs of all stakeholders including users, product makers, and platforms. Collectively, these companies led the way through requirements and specification development, reference design, multiple test events and final specification validation to reach this industry milestone.

"We would not be where we are today without the strength and dedication of the Alliance members who have provided thousands of engineers, intellectual property, software accelerators, security protocols, and the financial resources to accomplish what no single company could ever do on their own," said Bruno Vulcano, Chair of the Alliance Board and R&D Manager for Legrand Digital Infrastructure. "With members equally distributed throughout the world, Matter is the realization of a truly global effort that will benefit manufacturers, customers and consumers alike, not just in a single region or continent."

More than just a specification, the Matter 1.0 standard launches with test cases and comprehensive test tools for Alliance members and a global certification program including eight authorized test labs who are primed to test not only Matter, but also Matter's underlying network technologies, Wi-Fi and Thread. Wi-Fi enables Matter devices to interact over a high-bandwidth local network and allows smart home devices to communicate with the cloud. Thread provides an energy efficient and highly reliable mesh network within the home. Both the Wi-Fi Alliance and Thread Group partnered with the Connectivity Standards Alliance to help realize the complete vision of Matter.

"Matter and Thread resolve interoperability and connectivity issues in smart homes so manufacturers can focus on other value-adding innovations," Thread Group president Vividh Siddha said. "Thread creates a self-healing mesh network which grows more responsive and reliable with each added device, and its ultra-lower power architecture extends battery life. Combined, Thread with Matter is a powerful choice for product companies and a great value for consumers."

"Matter leverages Wi-Fi's sophisticated network efficiency, global pervasiveness of more than 18 billion devices in use today, and robust standards-based foundation to help deliver the IoT vision," said Edgar Figueroa, president and CEO, Wi-Fi Alliance. "Together, Wi-Fi CERTIFIED and Matter bring simple and secure interoperability for a better user experience with a wide range of IoT devices."

Matter is also striking new ground with security policies and processes using distributed ledger technology and Public Key Infrastructure to validate device certification and provenance. This will help to ensure users are connecting authentic, certified, and up-to-date devices to their homes and networks.

This initial release of Matter, running over Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Thread, and using Bluetooth Low Energy for device commissioning, will support a variety of common smart home products, including lighting and electrical, HVAC controls, window coverings and shades, safety and security sensors, door locks, media devices including TVs, controllers as both devices and applications, and bridges.
Source: The Connectivity Standards Alliance
Add your own comment

8 Comments on Matter Arrives Bringing A More Interoperable, Simple And Secure Internet Of Things to Life

#1
Solaris17
Super Dainty Moderator
TheLostSwededistributed ledger technology
Dang they even managed to use blockchain /s I can’t wait to grab one of these devices and take it apart. I need to re read this when I’m not in the move but I see.

Some kind of internet sharing between unlike devices when not local?

Proprietary mesh network when local

Possibly a new protocol
Posted on Reply
#2
DeathtoGnomes
I'm interested on how they will handle privacy. If they allow data mining or not.
Posted on Reply
#3
MentalAcetylide
Pretty soon you won't be able to wipe your ass without it being "logged" somewhere. I don't understand their pursuit in having so much interconnected. They speak of the IoT & better security, but if the top spy/intelligence agencies have system breaches, I don't see how its a good idea to have so much stuff jacked in to the internet when its not necessary.
Posted on Reply
#4
Fourstaff
MentalAcetylidePretty soon you won't be able to wipe your ass without it being "logged" somewhere. I don't understand their pursuit in having so much interconnected. They speak of the IoT & better security, but if the top spy/intelligence agencies have system breaches, I don't see how its a good idea to have so much stuff jacked in to the internet when its not necessary.
The reason why we have so many devices and variants of IoTs is because there are a lot of people who wants something to be connected to the internet, but not everyone wants to connect the same thing. e.g. some people will connect their heating, others will connect their lights.

If you want to log your ass wiping: www.zdnet.com/article/lg-uplus-launches-iot-for-bathrooms-with-wi-fi-bidet-toilet/
Posted on Reply
#5
bonehead123
Hey CSA, come back and talk to me (in a few decades/centuries) when you figure out how to eliminate all platform incompatibilities (IoT my ass), cookies, ads, trackers, data collections, pop-ups/unders/sideways and all other privacy intrusions, then perhaps this will turn into a valid, beneficial conversation about what does & does not MATTER......

until then:

s//N//o//O//z//E :D
Posted on Reply
#6
AsRock
TPU addict
First thing i did when we got our router was to disable IOT, don't need more fail points in our devices let alone other possible issue's.
MentalAcetylidePretty soon you won't be able to wipe your ass without it being "logged" somewhere. I don't understand their pursuit in having so much interconnected. They speak of the IoT & better security, but if the top spy/intelligence agencies have system breaches, I don't see how its a good idea to have so much stuff jacked in to the internet when its not necessary.
HAHA if you allow it then yes, made me think of that Apple watch they keep banging on about. They want every single bit of data on everyone and people for the most part are dumb enough to not care.

It's their new way of getting data without paying for it, dumb people.
Posted on Reply
#7
Audioave10
"including Amazon, Apple, Comcast, Google, Signify and SmartThings"
I don't look at these companies and think "Security". :shadedshu:
Posted on Reply
#8
Vayra86
But I don't even need IoT, so...
Posted on Reply
May 3rd, 2024 08:39 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts