Back in 2012, Wired published an article titled “CIA Chief: We’ll Spy on You Through Your Dishwasher.” That was not some wild theory. That was based on remarks from then-CIA Director David Petraeus, who was speaking about the so-called Internet of Things at an In-Q-Tel summit, the CIA’s own venture capital arm. Petraeus called these technologies “transformational,” especially for their effect on “clandestine tradecraft.” In plain English, the intelligence world saw your home appliances, television, car navigation system, light switches, phone apps, and connected devices as the next great surveillance frontier.
Petraeus said that “items of interest will be located, identified, monitored, and remotely controlled” through RFID, sensor networks, embedded servers, and internet-connected devices. That is the quote everyone should remember. They were not hiding it. They were telling you directly that the smart home would become the spy home. Once upon a time, they had to bug your chandelier. Now they simply wait for you to buy the device, install the app, connect it to Wi-Fi, and sign away your privacy in some user agreement nobody reads.
Wired correctly noted that these devices would produce tagged, geolocated data that could be intercepted in real-time. The dishwasher quote was not really about dishwashers alone. It was about the entire home becoming a listening post and tracking station. Your television, thermostat, lighting system, refrigerator, phone, PlayStation, car, smartwatch, and now even your pet’s microchip become pieces of a surveillance net. This is precisely how tyranny advances, not with a knock at the door, but with convenience, entertainment, and a monthly subscription.

Petraeus also admitted that this would “change our notions of secrecy” and force a rethink of “our notions of identity and secrecy.” That is military-intelligence language for the end of privacy. They understood long before the average person that once everything became connected, anonymity would become nearly impossible. You would no longer need a warrant to follow someone physically. Their devices would betray them. Their home would betray them. Their car would betray them. Their entire digital footprint would become a map for government and intelligence agencies.
Now we see the same concept expanding into license plate readers that can track phones, wearables, infotainment systems, Bluetooth devices, AirTags, and even animals. This is the same architecture Petraeus was applauding in 2012. They began by calling it smart technology. Then it became public safety. Then national security. Eventually, it becomes total surveillance. The public was mocked for warning about this, but the CIA director said it himself over a decade ago. The only thing that changed is that the technology has finally caught up with the ambition.




















