Submission + - CES Worst in Show Awards Call Out The Tech Making Things Worse (ifixit.com)
chicksdaddy writes: CES, the Consumer Electronics Show, isn’t just about shiny new gadgets, as AP reports (https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fapnews.com%2Farticle%2Fces-worst-show-ai-0ce7fbc5aff68e8ff6d7b8e6fb7b007d): this year brought back the fifth annual Worst in Show anti-awards (https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.worstinshowces.com%2F), calling out the most harmful, wasteful, invasive, and unfixable tech at the Las Vegas show. The coalition behind the awards — including Repair.org, iFixit, EFF, PIRG, Secure Repairs and others — put the spotlight on products that miss the point of innovation and make life worse for users.
2026 Worst in Show winners include:
Overall (and Repairability): Samsung’s AI-packed Family Hub fridge — overengineered, hard to fix, and trying to do everything but keep food cold.
Privacy: Amazon Ring AI — expanding surveillance with features like facial recognition and mobile towers.
Security: Merach UltraTread treadmill — AI fitness coach that also hoovers up sensitive data with weak security guarantees — including a Privacy Policy that declares the company "cannot guarantee the security of your personal information" (!!)
Environmental Impact: Lollipop Star — a single-use music-playing electronic lollipop that epitomizes needless e-waste.
Enshittification: Bosch eBike Flow App — pushing lock-in and digital restrictions that make gear worse over time.
“Who Asked For This?”: Bosch Personal AI Barista — voice-assistant coffee maker that nobody really wanted.
People’s Choice: Lepro Ami AI Companion — an overhyped “soulmate” cam that creeps more than comforts.
The message? Not all tech is progress. Some products add needless complexity, threaten privacy, or throw sustainability out the window — and the industry’s watchdogs are calling them out.
2026 Worst in Show winners include:
Overall (and Repairability): Samsung’s AI-packed Family Hub fridge — overengineered, hard to fix, and trying to do everything but keep food cold.
Privacy: Amazon Ring AI — expanding surveillance with features like facial recognition and mobile towers.
Security: Merach UltraTread treadmill — AI fitness coach that also hoovers up sensitive data with weak security guarantees — including a Privacy Policy that declares the company "cannot guarantee the security of your personal information" (!!)
Environmental Impact: Lollipop Star — a single-use music-playing electronic lollipop that epitomizes needless e-waste.
Enshittification: Bosch eBike Flow App — pushing lock-in and digital restrictions that make gear worse over time.
“Who Asked For This?”: Bosch Personal AI Barista — voice-assistant coffee maker that nobody really wanted.
People’s Choice: Lepro Ami AI Companion — an overhyped “soulmate” cam that creeps more than comforts.
The message? Not all tech is progress. Some products add needless complexity, threaten privacy, or throw sustainability out the window — and the industry’s watchdogs are calling them out.