Two of the bugs received a 9.8 out of 10 CVSS severity rating. They can be exploited to send commands to a tracker device to execute with no meaningful authentication […] And there's no fixes for these security flaws
The company could have given everyone a month's notice that it was going out of business. It could have open sourced code or posted documentation to help users get running on some other system. It could have given forum members a chance to get organized on some other site.
But that didn't happen. Instead, Insteon committed the cardinal sin of smart home companies: leaving customers—and their gear—in the lurch.
« Researchers came up with an array of eight STOs connected in a series that converted 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi electromagnetic radio waves into an electrical current that was transmitted to a capacitor and lit a 1.6V LED. Five seconds of charging the capacitor powered the LED for one minute »
One week notice before losing your access to your smart home devices if you don't want to pay the subscription, not the best way to deal with business model change though…