Talk:Airzone Cloud moves to a subscription-based model
Sourcing improvements and factual corrections
I'm an Airzone customer directly affected by this change and an HVAC installer working with Airzone systems professionally. I have several elements that may help address the sourcing concerns flagged on this article, and I'd like to propose changes before editing directly.
Elements I can contribute with verifiable sources:
- The original Airzone announcement newsletter, archived on the Wayback Machine on May 29, 2026 (the day after the announcement): https://web.archive.org/web/20260529164019/https://confort.airzonecontrol.com/airzone-cloud-fr-systemes1 The article currently dates the announcement to "early 2026" — it was actually May 28, 2026, with the paywall taking effect October 2026 (6-month free trial for existing users).
- A precision on the scope of the change: based on the official announcement, remote visualization remains free without subscription. Only remote control (sending commands) moves behind the paywall. The article currently states users "lose all remote access", which is imprecise.
- Information from Airzone France technical support confirming that the current Airzone Webserver model does not support the local API documented in Airzone's integration manual, and that a separate hardware product (AZX6WSPHUB, approximately €300) is required to obtain local API access independent of Airzone Cloud.
Elements I would prefer not to touch:
The Lawsuit section, including claims of action by FACUA and OCU. I have no independent source confirming these specific organizations are involved, but I don't want to remove content others have contributed without input from editors more familiar with the Spanish consumer protection landscape.
Would adding the elements above, with proper inline references, be an appropriate way to address the Incomplete flag ? Should I proceed with edits, or would you prefer I draft changes here first? Thanks. Matthias (talk) 13:26, 3 June 2026 (UTC)