Amazon’s Ring doorbell nearly crossed a line that would have turned millions of private front-porch cameras into nodes in a broader surveillance network. The company had planned to integrate its home ...
Ring, owned by Amazon, used the spot to promote a feature in the security camera that helps people find lost pets.
Turning off Search Party is straightforward enough: From the Ring app on your phone, tap the menu button (top left), then ...
Although the claims originated from Ring's since-canceled community requests partnership with security technology company Flock, the feature remains.
Ring announced the launch of a new feature designed to help reunite lost pets with their families and promoted it in a Super Bowl commercial, but backlash followed, with critics raising fresh concerns ...
Ring’s Search Party helps find lost pets, but a leaked email hints at bigger crime-fighting ambitions, sparking new privacy concerns.
The Fulu Foundation, a nonprofit that pays out bounties for removing user-hostile features, is hunting for a way to keep Ring ...
Amazon and Ring market their cameras as simple tools for safer homes, but recent findings from regulators and privacy ...
Ring CEO Jamie Siminoff has indicated that the company's controversial Search Party feature might not always be just for lost ...
The 30-second spot showed how Ring devices could help locate a missing dog by sending an alert to nearby cameras, prompting them to scan the neighborhood using AI recognition to look for lost pets.