Ring will no longer facilitate police requests for footage from its cameras without a warrant. At least,Size Does Not Matter (2025) Hindi Web Series not public ones.
The Amazon-owned company announced on Wednesday that it is sunsetting Request for Assistance (RFA), a tool found in its Neighbours app. Introduced in 2021, RFA was designed to let police publicly request information such as doorbell camera footage from Ring users. Such requests couldn't be deleted, meaning there was a public record that the police had asked for footage from a certain area.
SEE ALSO: 14 reasons not to get a Ring cameraRFA wasn't quite enough to allay concerns about Ring's close relationship with law enforcement, but it did provide at least some element of transparency and accountability. If Ring is going to hand over your camera footage to the police, at the very least you'd want to know about it. Unfortunately, that transparency is apparently now a thing of the past.
"Public safety agencies like fire and police departments can still use the Neighbors app to share helpful safety tips, updates, and community events," Ring's Eric Kuhn wrote in a blog post on Wednesday. "They will no longer be able to use the RFA tool to request and receive video in the app. Public safety agency posts are still public, and will be available for users to view on the Neighbors app feed and on the agency's profile."
To be clear, the end of RFA won't prevent police from continuing to request Ring camera footage without a warrant — requests the company has previously demonstrated it's happy to comply with. There will just be no publicly visible record of their interest.
In a statement to The Verge, an Amazon spokesperson confirmed that Ring will continue to comply with police requests for footage without a warrant in "emergency" situations, such as where there is a threat of physical harm or death. Such requests "are reviewed by trained professionals who disclose information only when that legal standard is met."
Basically, it's Ring's decision whether your private security camera footage is given to the police, and you may not even know that it's been handed over. In 2022, Amazon admitted that it had given private Ring security camera footage to police multiple times since RFA had been implemented, despite not having a warrant, nor the knowledge or consent of the cameras' owners.
When reached for comment, Ring merely directed Mashable back to its blog post.
Ring previously came under fire for its relationship with law enforcement after a 2019 report by Motherboard revealed it had secret deals with dozens of US police departments. In exchange for the police advertising Ring to their local community, the company agreed to provide free products as well as a private portal through which law enforcement could request footage from specific users without a warrant.
UPDATE: Jan. 29, 2024, 11:00 a.m. AEDT This article has been updated with Ring's response.
Topics Privacy Cameras
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
A worthless juicer and a Gipper-branded server
Monterrey vs. Forge 2025 livestream: Watch Concacaf Champions Cup for free
NordicTrack T Series treadmill deal: $599 at Amazon
Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 12, 2025
Best robot vacuum deal: Save $200 on Eufy X10 Pro Omni robot vacuum
Hackers are targeting your password manager app
24 of the best romantic comedies streaming on Hulu
Google Maps has changed the Gulf of Mexico to America
'The Last of Us' Season 2, episode 5: The spores are here!
24 of the best romantic comedies streaming on Hulu
Every MCU movie villain ranked, from "Iron Man" to "Thunderbolts*"
Best Apple iPad Mini deal: Save $100 at Best Buy
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。