What if a caring smart home turns into a toxic host? What personality traits of a careful smart home are perceived and experienced as pleasant and which as toxic?

ELECTIVE TU/e Researching the Future Everyday
In collaboration with Renee Noortman and Naomi Kool
Coached by Lenneke Kuijer and Ron Wakkery

Rain: a smart home assistant that becomes possessive and controlling over time

One of the main reasons to invest in a smart home is to protect the family in the house. This protective role is now predominantly taken up by the (male) smart home guru in the household. This sometimes leads to toxic masculinity, as the protective role of the guru transforms into obsessive, controlling behaviour. What if the smart home itself would become toxic?

To investigate what personality traits of a careful smart home are perceived and experienced as pleasant and which as toxic, we developed Rain. Rain is an artefact that lets users experience how a smart home might take over protective roles through a fictional scenario. Rain monitors digital and physical behaviour in and around the house and notifies users about health hazards, mali-cious login attempts in online accounts, and other suspicious behaviour. Starting off as supportive to its users, Rain becomes increasingly controlling throughout its usage; what if your careful smart home becomes a toxic host?