铃动(Ring)推出新功能,允许警方实时访问摄像头画面。
Ring introducing new feature to allow police to live-stream access to cameras

原始链接: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/07/amazon-ring-cashes-techno-authoritarianism-and-mass-surveillance

在创始人杰米·西米诺夫(Jamie Siminoff)回归领导下,Ring公司正在逆转注重隐私的改革,并增加警方获取用户录像的权限,引发了对公民自由的严重担忧。该公司正在重新推出允许警方直接请求甚至*实时直播* Ring摄像头画面 的功能,尽管过去曾出现过未经授权访问录像以及监视抗议者等滥用行为。 这一转变与公司内部对“人工智能优先”技术的关注相吻合,暗示着可能出现面部识别等具有潜在侵入性的功能。Ring公司正在激励员工整合人工智能,进一步表明了这一发展方向。 这些变化推翻了此前因公众压力而采取的措施——包括端到端加密和结束与警方的直接合作。批评人士认为,这一举动并非出于公共安全考虑(因为犯罪率相对较低),而是出于利润驱动,利用日益增长的“技术威权主义”趋势,科技公司通过监视获利,类似于谷歌等公司的类似行为。 这种倒退对隐私构成了重大威胁,并朝着大规模监控迈出了令人担忧的一步。

## Ring 新的警察实时直播功能引发隐私担忧 Ring 公司推出了一项新功能,允许警方请求实时访问用户的摄像头,这在 Hacker News 上引发了激烈的讨论。虽然该公司将其宣传为“选择加入”,但许多评论者表示怀疑,担心存在欺骗性的实施方式(例如隐藏的设置或捆绑同意),以及执法部门不可避免的滥用。 担忧的焦点在于潜在的权力过大,特别是来自国土安全部(DHS)等机构,以及随着监控变得无处不在,隐私权的侵蚀。用户们讨论了替代方案,例如自托管系统(Reolink、Synology、Unifi),并优先考虑本地存储以避免基于云端的数据访问。 有几位用户指出,即使选择加入,法律要求(如传票或国家安全信函)也可能绕过用户的同意。 还有人强调亚马逊故意采用的品牌策略——通过将产品仅仅宣传为“Ring”,来与这项备受争议的功能保持距离——以避免损害品牌形象。 这场讨论凸显了人们对科技公司协助加强警察监控的普遍不信任感。
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原文

Ring founder Jamie Siminoff is back at the helm of the surveillance doorbell company, and with him is the surveillance-first-privacy-last approach that made Ring one of the most maligned tech devices. Not only is the company reintroducing new versions of old features which would allow police to request footage directly from Ring users, it is also introducing a new feature that would allow police to request live-stream access to people’s home security devices. 

This is a bad, bad step for Ring and the broader public. 

Ring is rolling back many of the reforms it’s made in the last few years by easing police access to footage from millions of homes in the United States. This is a grave threat to civil liberties in the United States. After all, police have used Ring footage to spy on protestors, and obtained footage without a warrant or consent of the user. It is easy to imagine that law enforcement officials will use their renewed access to Ring information to find people who have had abortions or track down people for immigration enforcement

Siminoff has announced in a memo seen by Business Insider that the company will now be reimagined from the ground up to be “AI first”—whatever that means for a home security camera that lets you see who is ringing your doorbell. We fear that this may signal the introduction of video analytics or face recognition to an already problematic surveillance device. 

It was also reported that employees at Ring will have to show proof that they use AI in order to get promoted. 

Not to be undone with new bad features, they are also planning on rolling back some of the necessary reforms Ring has made: namely partnering with Axon to build a new tool that would allow police to request Ring footage directly from users, and also allow users to consent to letting police livestream directly from their device. 

After years of serving as the eyes and ears of police, the company was compelled by public pressure to make a number of necessary changes. They introduced end-to-end encryption, they ended their formal partnerships with police which were an ethical minefield, and they ended their tool that facilitated police requests for footage directly to customers. Now they are pivoting back to being a tool of mass surveillance. 

Why now? It is hard to believe the company is betraying the trust of its millions of customers in the name of “safety” when violent crime in the United States is reaching near-historically low levels. It’s probably not about their customers—the FTC had to compel Ring to take its users’ privacy seriously. 

No, this is most likely about Ring cashing in on the rising tide of techno-authoritarianism, that is, authoritarianism aided by surveillance tech. Too many tech companies want to profit from our shrinking liberties. Google likewise recently ended an old ethical commitment that prohibited it from profiting off of surveillance and warfare. Companies are locking down billion-dollar contracts by selling their products to the defense sector or police.

Shame on Ring.

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