Police Can Access Your Ring Camera Footage Without a Warrant
After Amazon admitted it gives Ring footage to police departments upon "emergency" request, San Francisco Mayor London Breed wants cops to be able to access any camera at any time.

The term "surveillance state" brings certain images to mind: cameras on every corner, cataloging passersby's every move. What one may not always consider is that some of those cameras may have been put up by private citizens for nonpublic use.
In 2018, Amazon bought Ring, a company that manufactures video doorbells, cameras, and other home security equipment. At its acquisition, just a few years after failing to get an offer on ABC's Shark Tank, the company was valued at upward of a billion dollars. Ring's doorbells give consumers live video of any visitor to their home; the company's founder touts that its products prevent neighborhood crime.
To that end, Ring provides a companion app, Neighbors, which functions similarly to NextDoor. Customers can share camera footage or safety alerts with other nearby Ring users. Ring has also partnered with over 2,000 police departments across the country. Using the Neighbors app, police are able to request access to customers' video footage to aid in investigations.
Ring's website stresses that it is the customer's choice whether or not to turn over the footage in response to a request. But as it turns out, that may not always be true.
Earlier this month, The Verge reported that despite Ring's assurances, police can access users' stored footage without the customer's permission or even a warrant. The Law Enforcement Request form on Amazon's website even includes a bright red "Submit Emergency Request" button. While Ring's Terms of Service stipulate that it will only furnish content to law enforcement, for example, "if legally required to do so" or to "comply with applicable law, regulation, legal process or reasonable preservation request," Amazon's Law Enforcement Guidelines state that it "reserves the right to respond immediately to urgent law enforcement requests for information in cases involving a threat to public safety or risk of harm to any person."
In fact, in a July 1 response to questions from Sen. Ed Markey (D–Mass.), Amazon admitted that so far in 2022, "in response to an emergency request," Ring provided customer footage to law enforcement 11 times. Given the number of police agencies in the program, this is a fairly insubstantial percent of the total, but it's also only for a single year; the company did not provide totals for any previous year. And as the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) pointed out, "there is no process for a judge or the device owner to determine whether there actually was an emergency."
Not to be outdone, San Francisco is taking things a step further. After the city recalled its progressive district attorney last month, Mayor London Breed appointed Brooke Jenkins as the interim replacement. Now, both Breed and Jenkins support a proposal to the Board of Supervisors that would give law enforcement real-time access to surveillance cameras, including those owned by individuals or businesses, like Ring or competitor Google Nest. SFGate reports that currently, local ordinance allows real-time access "only if there is a serious risk of physical injury or death." The new proposal would expand this field to "crimes such as retail theft, rioting, looting and drug-dealing."
This new ordinance is troubling enough without considering Ring's sheer growth: Since more cameras make its features more effective, Ring has given away free and discounted doorbells in cities across the country and advocated that law enforcement encourage citizens to purchase cameras. In Los Angeles, the company enlisted more than 100 police officers to hawk Ring products in exchange for free or discounted cameras. In Lakeland, Florida, Ring donated 15 doorbells for police to give away to residents for free in exchange for "Engag[ing] the Lakeland community with outreach efforts on the platform to encourage adoption of the platform/app." It additionally contributed $10 per Lakeland-area download of the Neighbors app toward the purchase of further Ring products for police to give away.
There would perhaps be some comfort if this burgeoning public-private panopticon were effective in reducing crime. Unfortunately, both scientific and anecdotal evidence says otherwise. Ring boasted of crime rate reductions between 20 percent and 55 percent in different areas of Los Angeles using its video doorbells. But an MIT Technology Review study was unable to replicate those findings, finding that the doorbells had little if any effect whatsoever. Additionally, officers have said that Ring users often tie up police resources with false-alarm reports.
An expanding network of cameras would be troubling enough if they were all simply self-contained and on private networks. The fact that police agencies are increasingly exerting control over the recordings and feeds of private cameras should alarm civil libertarians. As EFF wrote, "Once infrastructure exists, there will always be temptation for police to use it for less urgent situations."
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Amazon's Ring is a private company. Don't like their terms of service? Build your own surveillance camera!
Or, as I've seen in a couple of places around the neighborhood:
Have a large box (or conceptually a small one could work) on the front porch with the Ring unit inside and a label that says, "Please drop packages inside." Admittedly, it doesn't work too well if you have your weight rack or mattress dropped off at your front door but, presumably, porch pirates aren't running off with weight racks or mattresses.
"But an MIT Technology Review study was unable to replicate those findings, finding that the doorbells had little if any effect whatsoever."
Here we go with "replicability" again. Sounds lime more white supremacy.
Who are you going to believe, MIT or The Science?
Wait, what did Fauci have to say on the topic?
Lime white is definitely the worst type of white
That’s because the Rong doorbell isn’t spying on you, it is ‘spying’ on the neighbors across the street. This simple little fact is omitted from all these Teen Reason articles.
If there is a drive by or an arson, the camera across the street sees it
Bad enough to have to worry about a nosy neighbor calling the police on you. Now you have to worry about the non-nosy neighbor's doorbell.
Hang a sign on your door that asks, for security purposes, any delivery drivers to go ring your neighbor's doorbell/surveillance unit.
The neighbor across the road had some similar unit installed and had a sign "Smile! You're on camera!" up at the end of their driveway. My immediate thought was "Good. If I ever have a break in, I know to tell the cops where to go to get the footage."
I really don't understand Reason's hang up on this one.
Their obsession with it is ridiculous.
Haven't written a damn thing about your phone, tv, Alexa, refrigerator, etc spying on you though...
Not only that but it flies in the face of their "private companies" refrain.
don't forget your "smart" vacuum cleaner.
Ring doesn't just sell doorbells. They also sell cameras for the rest of the house, including the intererior. Presumably, if the police get access to one, they will try get access to them all.
So... don't get a ring camera system?
Just a thought
Up next: Compulsory quartering of police in private homes to reduce response time.
I used to chuckle at such comments...but lately such headlines wouldn't surprise me in the least
It's meant as humor.
Mostly.
At first skim, I wasn't clear on whether it was quartering - 'the act of assigning housing' or 'the act of dividing into fourths'. Different joke but it kinda works both ways.
I went dark with quartering police as in the William Wallace treatment of police.
way to revive 3A love it.
Alles klar, Herr Kommissar?
When seconds count, the police are in your bedroom.
They already did that during covid, except it was the "homeless" (who compromise a large portion of their blmantifa street army)
The important thing is that in 10 years when it comes out that ring doorbells and similar products exacerbate racial disparities in law enforcement we can all be told this was the plan all along, to bolster the hetero normative white supremist global patriarchy or whatever. Bonus: assholes like Breed and their ilk will get to run on how they will put a stop to what they helped create.
Everyone listen to this because I'm getting tired of saying it:
The Cloud == Someone else's computer.
https://xkcd.com/908/
4 panel Comic strip that explains this.
5
Let's all just accept that we're under constant surveillance and there's nothing we can do about it.
if RING has your footage it is not your footage.
The NSA has all your "footage" of everything and they will do with it as they please.
exactly this. started with pen registers iirc and now here we are.
About as dumb as yet another article on gay marriage
Just one more reason I don't use any Amazon products, although I buy books, etc., from them.
I have two sets of cameras, one indoors to keep track of the dogs, and one outdoors to keep track of the surroundings. The indoor ones connect to my server and I have software that handles them. The outdoor ones connect to a separate DVR that I can access from my network. I put the signal from the DVR into a DMZ on my router so it can be accessed remotely and offered the link to the local police. They declined the offer. I would have had no problem with them having 24-hour access to my external cameras, but I will not ever give them access to the ones in my home. I would share some videos if necessary, but they won't have direct access to them. I don't post or store any videos on the cloud, and my local storage is encrypted, so without my permission, they would have a hard time getting them.
The thing about encryption is that it's only as safe as the person that knows the password.
Which is to say, if the police are ever in a situation where they have a genuine need for your footage and can't get the evidence some other way, and you refuse to give it to them, then what's going to happen is that the cameras in the interrogation room are going to have a malfunction, and thirty minutes later they'll find that you somehow beat yourself with a bike lock before you wrote down the password. And if you wrote it down wrong, then there's going to be another malfunction.
I guess that's one way to prove you don't live in America.
From personal experience the narrative is far more important than the truth. A picture may be worth a thousand words, but nowhere does its say they're true. In my eyes - my cameras exonerated me. The State - simply advocated an 'alternate theory.' A theory that suited their narrative. The State has the power to make the process the punishment and will wield it without regard for truth or justice.
Not mine they can't.
I guess these guys haven't heard about a little ditty called the 4th Amendment.
'Course once the pre-cogs get up and running, we won't need the doorbells.
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