Ring, owned by Amazon, used the spot to promote a feature in the security camera that helps people find lost pets.
Updated Feb. 24, clarification appended Feb. 20 Milo went missing. Yet it wasn’t the lost puppy that gave people the jitters ...
Ring cameras have come under scrutiny for new features users didn't ask for and for partnerships with third‑party firms that ...
The Fulu Foundation, a nonprofit that pays out bounties for removing user-hostile features, is hunting for a way to keep Ring ...
Ring is ending its planned tie-up with police surveillance company Flock Safety after critics raise fresh worries about ...
Privacy-focused hackers are being offered cash to modify Ring cameras so they work locally without sending data to Amazon, reflecting growing unease over how home surveillance data is collected and ...
Amazon ends Ring’s planned Flock Safety integration after Super Bowl backlash, reigniting debate over surveillance technology ...
Amazon has dropped plans to partner its Ring doorbell cameras with police surveillance tech company Flock Safety, after a controversial Super Bowl ad.
Milo went missing. Yet it wasn’t the lost puppy that gave people the jitters — it was the promise behind the story: That a communitywide web of home security systems could transform a neighborhood ...
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