Putting IP Addresses on Old and updated IoT Devices

Believe it or not, but the most common IoT devices have existed for years without an IP address. And according to CompTIA's IoT study, companies are spending more time adding networking functionality to existing hardware than they are creating new hardware.

Adding network functionality to old devices is not very easy, but it seems like it should be. You add small (IoT) devices to intermediary physical devices. These then connect to the legacy physical device. The smaller devices contain programming that tells the intermediary physical devices to get the larger, legacy physical equipment to do certain things. This is how organizations are making legacy dams, power grids and other devices ready for remote network administration.

The good thing about this process is that we can better manage our power grids and other foundational services. The potential danger is that we don’t always follow secure software and hardware development standards as we move forward.
Why Can’t We Update IoT Devices?

The way IoT devices are rushed to market makes them pretty difficult to secure, in even the most basic ways. Too often, organizations make decisions to skip vital steps during the software and hardware development process, incurring technical debt, as described above. It is important, though, to understand that incurring technical debt is usually more than the practice of accidentally creating sloppy code.
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