Wink smart hub users get one week’s notice to pay up or lose access

Devices will stop working for users who don’t want to pay the new monthly fee. …

I, too, leave my electronics artfully placed in the middle of my stylish living room for the cat to knock over.

Enlarge / I, too, leave my electronics artfully placed in the middle of my stylish living room for the cat to knock over.

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A popular smart-home hub is suddenly a lot less popular with its users after making a surprise announcement that customers will have to start paying a monthly subscription fee next week or lose access altogether.

The Wink Hub first launched in 2014, promising a way for smart-home enthusiasts to connect and control all their devices at once through one master interface. Basically, Wink exists to simplify life for someone whose lights, locks, thermostat, cameras, and appliances all come from different brands and therefore need different apps to operate.

Many such platforms operate on a subscription basis, but Wink was not traditionally among them. For the past six years, consumers have happily plunked down cash to buy Wink’s hardware and then used the app for free. As of May 13, though, that will no longer be the case, Wink said yesterday, giving customers one week to pay up or lose access to the hubs they’ve used for years.

In short, the company needs cash. “Wink has taken many steps in an effort to keep your Hub’s blue light on, however, long term costs and recent economic events have caused additional strain on our business,” the company writes—presumably an allusion to the COVID-19 crisis. “Unlike companies that sell user data to offset costs associated with offering free services, we do not. Data

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