New York State Senate introduced Bill S8507, titled the Connected Consumer Product End-of-Life Disclosure Act. The legislation aims to improve transparency for consumers purchasing connected devices, including IoT and smart products.

Key Provisions

• Disclosure Requirement: Manufacturers must provide clear information on the duration of technical support, security updates, and bug fixes for hardware, firmware, or software essential to device functionality.
• Timing: Disclosure must be made at the point of sale.
• Scope: Applies to devices that connect to the internet, interact with cloud services, or continuously receive updates.

Legislative Status

• Sponsor: Patricia Fahy (D) and others
• Introduced: 12 September 2025
• Referred to: Senate Rules Committee
• Next Steps: Committee review, potential amendments, and a full Senate vote

Impact on Manufacturers & Suppliers

Companies that manufacture, import, distribute, or sell connected consumer products in New York should:

1. Identify Covered Products: Review portfolios to determine which devices fall under the “connected consumer product” definition.
2. Prepare Disclosures: Document the duration of support, updates, and bug fixes.
3. Update Product Information: Modify labeling, packaging, and online sales content to comply.
4. Monitor Legislation: Track progress and be ready for internal implementation.

Strategic Considerations

While S8507 does not regulate chemicals or CAS-listed substances, it signals a broader trend toward:

• Product lifecycle transparency
• Software and firmware sustainability
• Consumer-rights-driven disclosure requirements

Manufacturers should integrate these emerging obligations into broader product compliance and sustainability frameworks.


Reference: New York Senate Bill S8507

 

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