Off-Prem

Edge + IoT

IoT biz Insteon goes silent, smart home gear plays dumb

CEO removes mention of company from LinkedIn profile


Internet-of-Things biz Insteon appears to have shut down its servers without notifying its customers, who are now wondering what they will do with various "smart" home accessories that are looking rather dumb.

Insteon, a subsidiary of Irvine-California-based Smartlabs, is a maker of smart home devices, including the Insteon Hub that controls assorted light switches, sensors, keypads, thermostats, remotes, and the like that can be automated via a proprietary mobile networking protocol.

Or at least they were – the company's internet presence has become unresponsive. Its press email address now bounces, various phone numbers either don't work or are always busy, and its web-hosted forum is gone. Nevertheless, Insteon's website reports that all is well and there's no need to panic – which is not the first time availability updates have failed to reflect reality.

What's more, as noted by IoT reporter Stacey Higginbotham, company CEO Rob Lilleness and other executives have removed any mention of Insteon from their LinkedIn profiles.

The Register left a message for Lilleness at Richmond Capital Partners, LLC, an investment firm that he appears to run and which owns Insteon parent Smartlabs. We've not heard back.

The silence of the servers doesn't prevent physical switches and buttons on Insteon accessories from operating, but it does mean there's no automation and scheduling available through the Insteon Hub mobile app. Just like a normal switch then, just much more expensive.

With the Insteon Hub app no longer working, Reddit users recommend alternative apps such as Home Assistant and OpenHAB that work with Insteon gear, at their own risk.

Insteon uses its own dual-mesh protocol that works via radio spectrum and powerline that isn't ZigBee, Wi-Fi, or Z-Wave. Insteon devices communicate directly with the Insteon Hub, so they should have relatively few dependencies on cloud services. Since the Insteon protocol has been reverse-engineered, technically savvy customers appear to have options for restoring lost functionality.

There's conflicting information about the risk of performing a factory reset on Insteon devices. The Home Assistant web page warns, "The Insteon company has shut down and turned off their cloud as of April 2022. Do not factory reset your device under any circumstances as it will not be recoverable."

However, a Reddit forum post that suggests recovery of a reset Hub may be possible.

The silent spring

Mike Richardson, owner of Redco Electric & Controls LLC and a professional Insteon installer, told The Register in an interview that his phone has been ringing like crazy since last Thursday with calls from confused customers. He said Insteon did not contact him to say anything about shutting down.

"I stopped doing Insteon installations about nine months ago," he said. "It was too hard to get parts."

Richardson, who does installation work in Arizona and California, said it became clear about a year ago that the company was having trouble. "It was a gradual disconnect," he said. "It wasn't overnight."

Insteon products started becoming harder to obtain, he explained. Items would be back ordered, would be available for a short time, and then would go out-of-stock again.

Richardson said there's a newer smart home hub made by a third-party firm called Universal Devices that has far more functionality than the basic Insteon hub. However, it requires an Insteon-brand modem to talk to powerline-connected devices. Two weeks ago, he said, you could get one for about $50. Now the prices on eBay have skyrocketed.

Customers discussing the situation on the /r/Insteon Reddit forum have been expressing their dismay, exploring alternative software and hardware options for their smart home setups, and mulling the possibility of a class action lawsuit.

Insteon could not be reached for comment. ®

Send us news
81 Comments

The channel stands corrected: Hardware is a refresh cycle business now

'For 30 years you thought you were business geniuses,' veteran analyst tells resellers and distributors

Hulk smash Musk and Zuck! Actor Mark Ruffalo and non-billionaire pals back network tech underpinning Bluesky

Free Our Feeds solicits funds to foster AT Protocol that powers decentralized social media

Look for the label: White House rolls out 'Cyber Trust Mark' for smart devices

Beware the IoT that doesn’t get a security tag

Short-lived bling, dumb smart things, and more: The worst in show from CES 2025

The honors are dubious, but boy, so is the tech

UK gives Openreach £289M for 4 rural broadband contracts in 'gigabit by 2030' push

Nation's dominant broadband plumber wins ahead of altnets

Azure networking snafu enters day 2, some services still limping

Struggling to connect to the cloud? You’re not alone

Capital One two-day outage leaves customers in free-fall

Third-party supplier blamed as folks left unable to access funds

Linus Torvalds offers to build guitar effects pedal for kernel developer

‘I'm a software person with a soldering iron’, he warns alongside release of Linux 6.13-rc7

Will 2025 be the year satellite-to-smartphone services truly take off?

Connectivity direct to unmodified mobes looms, thanks to Starlink and co

Tongue-zapping spoons, tea-cooling catbots, lazy vacuums and more from CES

All the consumer electronics weirdness you didn't want to see in person anyway

Quantum? No solace: Nvidia CEO sinks QC stocks with '20 years off' forecast

D-Wave, Rigetti, others plummet nearly 50% after Huang says the obvious

Google's 10-year Chromebook lifeline leaves old laptops headed for silicon cemetery

Longer support for newer models won't save prior versions from scrapheap