Ring、AI活用でホームセキュリティを超えた新アプリストアを発表
Ringは新たなアプリストアを通じて、高齢者ケアやビジネスニーズなど、家庭セキュリティを超えた幅広いユースケースをAIでターゲットにすることで事業拡大を図っている。
キーポイント
事業領域の拡大戦略
Ringはアプリストアの導入により、従来の家庭セキュリティ分野から高齢者ケアやビジネス用途など、より広範な市場への進出を目指している。
AI活用による価値向上
AI技術を活用することで、単なる監視カメラ以上の付加価値を提供し、多様なニーズに対応したソリューションを実現しようとしている。
プラットフォーム化への転換
ハードウェアメーカーからエコシステムを構築するプラットフォーム企業へとビジネスモデルを進化させようとする動きを示している。
市場競争の激化
家庭用IoT市場において、単一機能の製品から多機能プラットフォームへの競争がさらに激化する可能性を示唆している。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この動きは、家庭用セキュリティ市場が成熟期を迎える中、RingがAIとプラットフォーム戦略で新たな成長機会を模索していることを示している。競合他社も同様の方向性を追求する可能性があり、IoTデバイス市場全体のビジネスモデル変革を促す契機となるだろう。
編集コメント
家庭用セキュリティ市場のリーダーがAIを活用して事業領域を拡大する戦略的動き。成功すれば業界のビジネスモデルに大きな影響を与える可能性があるが、実現には技術的・市場的課題も多い。
Ringのアプリストアにより、同社はセキュリティ分野を超え、高齢者ケアや業務ニーズなど、より幅広いユースケースに対応できるようになる。
原文を表示
With now more than 100 million cameras in the field, Amazon-owned Ring is ready to take advantage of its sizable footprint with the launch of a new app store that will expand its cameras’ capabilities. Focused initially on areas like elder care, workforce analytics, rental management, and more, the store will allow developers of all sizes to tap into Ring’s ecosystem to reach customers.
First announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, the app store arrives alongside Ring’s expansion beyond smart doorbells and cameras for people’s homes to those aimed at businesses. But the new store is also enabled by the leaps being made in AI technology, which can take advantage of Ring’s ability to see and hear things in the real world and translate that for users in specific situations.
For instance, one launch partner, the SoftBank-backed company Density, has an app called Routines focused on elder care, which can leverage Ring cameras to help families keep an eye on their loved ones, like their aging parents, and be alerted to concerns like falls or changes in routines.
An app from QueueFlow can help businesses analyze Ring camera event metadata on a read-only basis to identify operational signals such as growing queue conditions, prolonged queue inactivity, and after-hours anomalies, among other things.
An app from Minut can help Airbnb hosts monitor their accommodations, which is tied to its other camera-less sensors that track things like excessive noise and temperature.
The idea, explains Ring founder and CEO Jamie Siminoff, is to expand the capabilities of what Ring cameras can do beyond providing homeowners’ security.
“With AI, there’s just an incredible amount of long tail use cases,” he told TechCrunch. “We are unlocking value that our customers have invested in, in things that … all of us together never thought we could do.”
However, there will be areas that are restricted, given the growing consumer backlash against surveillance technology, which has also impacted Ring. After the company launched features that could find lost pets or watch for wildfires, customers became aware of how much these cameras could do — and how that could lead to a world where people couldn’t go anywhere without being tracked, recorded, and potentially even recognized by AI-powered camera systems.
Aware of the potential for similar bad PR with its app store, Siminoff notes that the terms will not permit apps that offer certain types of privacy-invasive features, like facial-recognition tools or license plate readers.
“We’re trying to be careful to make sure that it is being used for … apps that deliver value to the customer,” he said of the Ring app store. “Certainly, we have to listen to what’s happening out in the market and the scrutiny.”
Following the backlash from customers, Ring canceled its partnership with Flock Safety, a maker of AI-powered cameras that share footage with law enforcement. The partnership would have allowed agencies using Flock to request footage from Ring doorbell and camera owners. Ring has a long history of sharing data with police and has received criticism from privacy advocates in recent months for new partnerships with law enforcement and companies like Axon.
Ring’s app store future
Ring’s new app store will be discoverable within the Ring app for iOS and Android devices and will initially be limited to customers in the U.S. before rolling out more broadly. However, adding apps to your Ring setup won’t involve using the platform’s in-app purchase payment systems.
That means Ring won’t be paying Apple or Google commissions when customers decide to expand their Ring experience with a partner’s tools.
Siminoff says this is because Ring isn’t the one actually distributing the apps — users will still likely need to download the partner’s app from the app store to access the new functionality. Meanwhile, the Ring app itself isn’t changing to incorporate the partners’ new features.
Still, this represents an interesting way to build an app ecosystem that’s outside the phone’s app stores, while still benefiting from Ring’s distribution on iOS and Android.
“It’s not just that Ring is doing an app store. It’s that Ring has a lot of cameras out there, and so therefore it is a big enough surface area that if [developers] do write something, [they] can get a decent number of customers and have a hopefully successful business,” Siminoff said.
In terms of monetization, when Ring directs a customer to one of its partners, it will be taking a commission on those sales. For now, that’s a 10% fee, but Ring says it’s open to apps offering other business models beyond subscriptions, like one-time fees or even free, ad-supported apps, if that’s something customers actually want.
At launch, there are around 15 apps available, but many more are in the pipeline, the company said. Developers are able to submit their apps for consideration through Ring’s developer site.
Other apps available now include WhatsThatBird.AI, a bird-identification app; memories.ai, a risk and security detection app (for fires, smoke, falls, leaks, etc.); Lumeo, an app for businesses offering alerts and people counting; LawnWatch, for lawn health monitoring; ProxView, loitering detection for businesses; StoreTraffic, a traffic and line monitoring app; Package Protect, for package delivery tracking; and Amazon’s own app, Cheer Chime, which chimes when a person tips at checkout.
“I would say that the goal by the end of the year is that there’s hundreds of apps in tens of verticals,” Siminoff said.
Updated to correct the link to QueueFlow’s app.
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