OK, as of August 25, 2015, scout alarm and smartthings have an official arrangement where you can pay $20 a month for scout monitoring apparently using your smart things installation, and get the kind of certificate that insurance companies usually want before they give you a discount.
Check all the features and requirements very carefully. As of this writing, scout does not have any integrated smoke detectors or carbon monoxide detectors. So you can set up to send yourself a text if these alarms go off, but their monitoring center will not be notified, and they will not call 911 for you if it’s a smoke detector that goes off.
In some jurisdictions, they can call 911 as a burglar alarm going off for contact sensors. But they don’t have any glass break detectors either.
So it’s always good to see new integration, and this is the first time that there has been a smartthings security integration that might qualify for a typical homeowners insurance discount, but again read all the features carefully to make sure it fits what you’re looking for. Don’t make any assumptions about what you think “any monitored security system” should provide. Or whether your own insurance company will accept it. Check the details.