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    Home»Laptops»So Many Brands Are Calling Their Basic Tech ‘AI’ Now: Here’s Why I’m Worried
    Laptops

    So Many Brands Are Calling Their Basic Tech ‘AI’ Now: Here’s Why I’m Worried

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminOctober 8, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    A man in the dark holds a phone with an AI chatbot bubble floating above it.
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    One new trend is dominating every tech show this year, especially the home tech I saw at Berlin’s 2025 IFA (Innovation for All) event. Companies are putting AI everywhere in their marketing and product info — even if it doesn’t make sense. 

    Tech fans are already arguing over what AI means, if certain technologies like chatbots are actually AI and whether certain AI features are even worth having (especially at the price of privacy). Brands are clouding the waters, which isn’t helping. Here are my two biggest concerns: Are all these new AI labels actually AI, and if they are, can they really help buyers?

    Read more: Promptware Threatens to Take Over AI and Smart Homes: Here’s How to Protect Yourself

    When is AI actually AI?

    bespoke-ai-kitchen-1

    Ai like Samsung’s Bespoke sounds fancy, but sometimes it’s just basic algorithms underneath.

    Ajay Kumar/CNET

    When I say artificial intelligence was everywhere at IFA, I mean it. The buzzword showed up in SwitchBot’s fuzzy bear robots and prompt-based wall decorations as well as Roborock’s smart mapping robot lawn mowers and Hisense’s refrigerator guides for recipes. Samsung brought all three of its AI brands to IFA, with Bespoke AI for appliances, Vision AI for home entertainment and Galaxy AI for its phones. And you better believe that voice assistants are now called “AI voice assistants” whenever possible. 

    But when so many companies slap on that AI label, it starts losing meaning. How many of these new devices actually have the modern definition of AI? I mean the common generative AIs, typically powered by LLMs, that we see every day in the form of Google Gemini and ChatGPT, which can summarize information and “talk” to us in conversational ways. Many do have some generative capabilities, but calling them AI in the same vein as fully fledged chatbots is a stretch at best. 

    AI Atlas badge tag

    Other uses of AI make it clear it’s a branding term, something that marketing needs to have these days. It’s disappointing and confusing when there are no standard AI features to be found in an AI-branded product. For example, when Samsung says its Bespoke AI can save energy used by its washing machines, it appears to refer to algorithms and sensors that control washing cycles, something that would never be called “AI” a few short years ago.

    Moves like this can cheapen the term and distract from products that really do have built-in artificial intelligence — when everything’s AI, nothing is. Or at least people start to feel that way, which is a marketing problem companies have only begun to face. 

    On the other hand, props to lighting company Lepro, which came to IFA ready to explain that its voice assistant really was created using an LLM trained on design concepts to help pick the right colors associated with a variety of activities. Details like these make it easier to see if the AI is really there and what it’s doing (that’s also helpful to me as a reviewer).

    When is AI worth having?

    woman walking near an amazon echo display

    How do you know which AI features are worth it in the home? You let us test them. 

    Amazon

    The surge of AI branding creates another dilemma: Is AI actually worth it in the smart home? Are these AI-labeled features worth their often-higher prices? That’s a trickier question. In some cases, absolutely — especially if you want AIs trained to recognize certain faces or scan your video clips for you.

    In other scenarios, AI doesn’t add much at all. Hisense made a great effort to add AI to all of its IFA announcements. But certain examples fell flat, like the AI voice assistant in its U8 S Pro Air Conditioner, which seems like just a voice assistant and not even an advanced one, limited to only 18 voice commands. The advertised AI Cooking Agent and AI Laundry Agent in its kitchen tech look completely unnecessary, butting into daily tasks we already know how to do or can find more teachable guides with a quick Google or question to a smart display.

    SwitchBot's Art Frames hanging on a pale wall, showing flower scenes.

    SwitchBot’s generative AI art frame looks fun and innovative, but it’s not going to make your life any easier.

    SwitchBot

    Even the innovative AI-prompt E Ink picture frame from SwitchBot, which I can’t wait to try, has a certain “Why do I need this?” quality to it. Many of the latest AI pushes suffer from this. We only have so much room in our homes and lives for new smart tech: AI works best when it’s saving us time and headaches, not creating more for us to manage. 

    This is the part where I toot my own horn, and all of us testers here at CNET. We don’t expect the typical tech buyer to have the time or energy to scout out all these details or quiz voice assistants with every command. That’s why we review devices, phones, apps and chatbots: To see which are worth it, which make life better, which have privacy issues, which hallucinate too much and all those other grimy details. When so many products are called AI this or AI that, you need experts to pan for the gold. And IFA 2025 has brought me a whole new list of tech to sift.

    If you want related home security thoughts, check out what I like about home security AI and see if it could help you out, too. 


    Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


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