I don't know who those manufacturers are, but I can guess. One left-field piece of advice I would offer is looking at what they specify for their own offices/HQs.
"Smart" commercial office space has a bit of a head start in this area, and the specifiers have now had some time to find their feet.
Some prominent IoT device manufacturers have had written into the specifications for their own buildings that, for example, the end user (read: them) shall be able to manage the certificates on the devices, and so on and so forth.
A couple that come to mind would make for nice blueprints for consumer protections if you can cut through the prescriptive talk about preferred tech.
"Smart" commercial office space has a bit of a head start in this area, and the specifiers have now had some time to find their feet.
Some prominent IoT device manufacturers have had written into the specifications for their own buildings that, for example, the end user (read: them) shall be able to manage the certificates on the devices, and so on and so forth.
A couple that come to mind would make for nice blueprints for consumer protections if you can cut through the prescriptive talk about preferred tech.