Is buying a ‘smart nappy’ really such a clever idea? | Arwa Mahdawi

Anxious parents may see the appeal of measuring their baby’s vital signs – but sharing your child’s data with a private company may not be wise

This week’s instalment of innovations no one was waiting for is brought to you by Pampers, which has announced a “smart nappy” system. Lumi consists of a sensor that you stick to a specially designed nappy; the gizmo then beams information about how much your little bub is peeing and sleeping to a dedicated app. You can complement this with a video monitor that links to the app and tracks room temperature and humidity. Voilà: your embarrassingly low-tech baby is now a sophisticated analytics machine.

If you can’t wait to start a more data-driven relationship with your newborn, I am afraid to say there is no word on when Lumi will launch in the UK (it arrives in the US this autumn). If you are in South Korea, however, you can grab some Huggies smart nappies; these let you know, via Bluetooth, whether your baby has urinated or defecated. A truly brilliant update to the obsolete technology known as “your nose”.

Smart nappies are just one of a growing range of products aimed at quantifying your baby. Mimo Baby, for example, offers a range of connected onesies that measure your child’s vital signs and transform them into daily timelines, allowing you to feed your parental anxiety or bore other people about your child in granular detail. There are smart baby socks, smart cribs and smart feeding bottles. Basically, there is smart everything.

Just how smart it is to share your kid’s personal data with a private company is another matter. It is worth noting that Pampers’ smart nappies were developed in partnership with Verily, which is part of Google’s parent company, Alphabet. According to the Washington Post, Google reached a settlement last week with US authorities after an investigation found that it improperly collected the data of children who used YouTube. And that is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the broader security implications of smart devices. Surely parenting is hard enough without having to worry if a hacker has broken into your kid’s nappy?

•Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist

Contributor

Arwa Mahdawi

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Tick tock: yes, men should be anxious about their biological clock, too
It takes two people to make a new person; so why do men get to opt out of all the worries that come with it?

Nosheen Iqbal

04, Jul, 2017 @5:47 PM

Article image
Millennials aren’t getting more rightwing with age. I suspect I know why | Arwa Mahdawi
The radicalism of my generation is often attributed to housing costs. But, as I found when I had my first child, there are much deeper issues at play, writes Arwa Mahdawi

Arwa Mahdawi

03, Jan, 2023 @12:16 PM

Article image
Why are pet owners more popular than parents?
It’s true that pets are easier to look after than babies – but their owners have some undeniably strange behaviours

Nell Frizzell

04, Apr, 2023 @1:35 PM

Article image
Men, pick up your toilet brushes! It could solve the great British baby shortage
In the midst of falling birthrates, it’s worth remembering that countries where men and women share chores tend to have more children

Coco Khan

23, Jan, 2024 @5:50 PM

Article image
Working from home and doing childcare is a recipe for disaster
New research confirms that women simply end up ‘double burdened’, as I know all too well. The only answer is a proper job

Zoe Williams

07, Mar, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
‘It is devastating’: the millennials who would love to have kids – but can’t afford a family
They are working three jobs, changing careers or moving to faraway areas with affordable housing in order to drum up enough money for children of their own. Sadly the numbers still don’t add up

Ammar Kalia

13, Oct, 2021 @5:00 AM

Article image
A day at the baby bank: ‘I feel at ease here, because I’m not the only one struggling’
The UK now has more than 200 baby banks – with demand at some rising 400% since the start of Covid. In Cambridgeshire, we meet the clients and volunteers at one busy centre

Chloë Hamilton

19, Dec, 2023 @10:00 AM

Article image
I know I want at least one baby. But the more I learn about motherhood, the more terrifying it seems | Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff
Even supposedly ‘positive’ birth stories make my heart sink. Am I just going to have to make a leap of faith, asks Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff

Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff

12, Mar, 2024 @2:42 PM

Article image
Beware the smart toaster: 18 tips for surviving the surveillance age
We’ve come a long way since the web was just a fun place to share cat gifs – now it’s a place mostly dedicated to finding and selling your personal info. Here’s what you need to know in this new era

Alex Hern and Arwa Mahdawi

28, Mar, 2018 @5:00 AM

Article image
It's tough to be a single parent and the government does nothing to help | Suzanne Moore
Suzanne Moore: This new round of punitive measures against single parents enrages me personally and politically

Suzanne Moore

13, Mar, 2013 @8:00 PM