This document discusses ethics and law in the Internet of Things world. It introduces IoT and defines ethics and law. It then covers the characteristics of IoT like ubiquity, miniaturization, and ambiguity. It raises ethics questions about responsibility if the internet connection breaks and who patches devices. It lists ethics principles like not causing harm and benefits adding to the common good. It also covers privacy, security, and trust issues in IoT like dualism, reductionism, and the privacy-security relationship. Finally, it concludes that IoT has gained traction but current laws may not strongly protect consumers from unintended usage.