COMMUNISM Mississippi Cops Can Now Use Your Ring Doorbell Camera To Live Stream Your Neighborhood

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Mississippi Cops Can Now Use Your Ring Doorbell Camera To Live Stream Your Neighborhood

Today in "those who surrender their liberty for security" news...

The Jackson, Mississippi police department is piloting a 45 day program that allows them to live stream private security cameras, including Amazon Ring cameras, at the residences of its citizens.

It's no surprise that Amazon's Ring cameras were the only brand named for the pilot program, as EFF pointed out, since they have over 1,000 partnerships with local police departments.

The program allows Ring owners to patch their camera streams to a "Real Time Crime Center" - i.e. a dispatcher on desk duty whose new favorite way of passing the time is to watch you bring out your garbage twice a week in a bathrobe.

While the pilot program is supposedly "opt-in" only, meaning residents have to volunteer to be a part of it, it is an obvious step in the wrong direction of mass privacy invasion without a warrant.

The worst part is that even if you don't participate and a neighbor's cameras are pointed off center, perhaps towards a portion of your property, that footage can now be reviewed and combed through by law enforcement officials.

Police have used Ring cameras to "build comprehensive CCTV camera networks blanketing whole neighborhoods", EFF notes, reducing the hardware burden on the department and slipping their presence into a neighborhood where it may otherwise not be welcomed.

Amazon published a statement distancing themselves from the program: "[Amazon and Ring] are not involved in any way with any of the companies or the city in connection with the pilot program. The companies, the police and the city that were discussed in the article do not have access to Ring’s systems or the Neighbors App. Ring customers have control and ownership of their devices and videos ,and can choose to allow access as they wish."


Mississippi Cops Can Now Use Your Ring Doorbell Camera To Live Stream Your Neighborhood | Zero Hedge

Coming to a neighborhood near you. Can you say Guten Tag? (The reference is to East Germany, remember them, when 1in 6 people were spies for the government.) Have a great day Comrade. If you think this is only in Jackson.......I have a bridge I desperately need to sell, and will give you a great deal, however it's in London.
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The American people pay good money to build their own jail because it is cool or convenient. Not to mention the billions they pay to be propagandized about how higher taxes and lower freedom is good for them.
Why yeah, pay 1500.00 for a phone that will track you. Cool huh?

Also wanted to mention that this is taking place in Jackson. Probably the most progressive liberal blue city in the state. GTR and voted in as mayor a Black Panther, who died in office. Voted in his brother, then his wife had something going on too.

So first them, and they think its a way to be safe AND cool. And then those who don't.
 

Repairman-Jack

Veteran Member
There are a few other choices available for ONVIF/IP camera doorbells that don't report to the cloud. I'm big on cameras and have been tinkering with home automation however those devices are not permitted to touch the internet.
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There are a few other choices available for ONVIF/IP camera doorbells that don't report to the cloud. I'm big on cameras and have been tinkering with home automation however those devices are not permitted to touch the internet.
Which is fine. But it's not you. Your doorbell would point away from your house, Just like the one across the street points at you.

You need to get one of those Amazon do-hickies so the cops can watch the guy across the street from you.

Just being sarcastic.
 

Elza

Veteran Member
There are a few other choices available for ONVIF/IP camera doorbells that don't report to the cloud. I'm big on cameras and have been tinkering with home automation however those devices are not permitted to touch the internet.
This is why everything in my house is and always will be hardwired! Plus I do not own or ever plan to own a smartphone.
 

hunybee

Veteran Member
This is why everything in my house is and always will be hardwired! Plus I do not own or ever plan to own a smartphone.


except as caryc points out, you may not have a camera that they can access, but your neighbor across the street probably does, and it is trained at your house.

if it isn't already a thing, i see someone (with the knowledge to do so), making a way for people to make their home "hidden" from view in some way.
 

Blue 5

Veteran Member
I've got Ring cameras all around the perimeter of my property...I really like them. I can keep tabs on the place when I'm at work. We're so far back in the woods that no camera on a nearby property could see my house so it's not a concern for us.
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I've got Ring cameras all around the perimeter of my property...I really like them. I can keep tabs on the place when I'm at work. We're so far back in the woods that no camera on a nearby property could see my house so it's not a concern for us.
That is extremely cool.

I bet you can even see the stars at night!

One of the things that concerns me is trailcams that can be accessed by phone. Government intrusion (read hacked) and those could easily be pointed at our place, by uh accident of course.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
That is extremely cool.

I bet you can even see the stars at night!

One of the things that concerns me is trailcams that can be accessed by phone. Government intrusion (read hacked) and those could easily be pointed at our place, by uh accident of course.

Yeah. Even us rural folks with no close neighbors aren't exactly safe. Those trail cams can be set up by anyone, trained on your property without you even knowing it. Sure puts a damper on sunbathing in my own backyard.
 

mbabulldog

Inactive
I've got Ring cameras all around the perimeter of my property...I really like them. I can keep tabs on the place when I'm at work. We're so far back in the woods that no camera on a nearby property could see my house so it's not a concern for us.
I've used Ring at my old house, but with our new house out in the woods I have concerns our wifi won't reach the camera's; how do you account for weak/non-existent wifi?
 

Blue 5

Veteran Member
I've used Ring at my old house, but with our new house out in the woods I have concerns our wifi won't reach the camera's; how do you account for weak/non-existent wifi?
To clarify before I answer your question, my cameras are mounted on the eaves of the house, covering all sides plus an extra covering the driveway. Their nice wide viewing angles, plus zoom capability, give me full coverage all around the house. One of the cameras occasionally has trouble maintaining a steady connection. To address this we plan to add a couple of wifi repeaters from our internet provider as soon as we can get in to speak to an actual person at our local office.
 

mbabulldog

Inactive
To clarify before I answer your question, my cameras are mounted on the eaves of the house, covering all sides plus an extra covering the driveway. Their nice wide viewing angles, plus zoom capability, give me full coverage all around the house. One of the cameras occasionally has trouble maintaining a steady connection. To address this we plan to add a couple of wifi repeaters from our internet provider as soon as we can get in to speak to an actual person at our local office.
ah, ok. thanks!
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Any camera attached to the internet can be accessed and viewed without your knowledge or permission. The video steams can be archived and reviewed without your knowledge or permission. The cloud is feudalism for the information age.

I can assure you these technologies created and controlled by the left can and will be used against their chosen enemies.... convenience is cool.


Report: Amazon Ring Gave Employees Unrestricted Access to Footage of Customers’ Homes
Jeff Bezos arrive at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Sunday, March 4, 2018, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
Charlie Nash14 Jan 2019

Ring, a home security camera company owned by Amazon, allowed employees unrestricted access to the cameras inside people’s homes, according to a report from the Intercept.

The Intercept reported last week that Ring “provided its Ukraine-based research and development team virtually unfettered access to a folder on Amazon’s S3 cloud storage service that contained every video created by every Ring camera around the world.”

“This would amount to an enormous list of highly sensitive files that could be easily browsed and viewed. Downloading and sharing these customer video files would have required little more than a click,” the Intercept explained, adding that “the video files were left unencrypted,” and the “Ukraine team was also provided with a corresponding database that linked each specific video file to corresponding specific Ring customers.”

Ring also reportedly provided similar access to “executives and engineers in the U.S.” allowing “unfiltered, round-the-clock live feeds from some customer cameras, regardless of whether they needed access to this extremely sensitive data to do their jobs.”

An unnamed source told the Intercept that if an engineer “knew a reporter or competitor’s email address, [they] could view all their cameras,” and claimed employees joked around by spying on their co-workers’ home cameras.

As advertised on Ring’s website, Ring allows you to “monitor your home from your smartphone, tablet or PC,” with the added ability to “speak to anyone on your property from anywhere,” through built-in microphones.

“Ring’s customizable motion sensors let you focus-in on the most important areas of your home. You’ll get instant alerts as soon as Ring detects motion, so you’ll always be the first to know when anyone steps foot on your property,” the company boasted. “Ring lets you monitor every corner of your property. With a Video Doorbell at your door and Stick Up Cams around the house, you can create a Ring of Security around your entire home.”

Ring has denied the claims in the Intercept’s report, with a spokesman declaring, “Ring employees never have and never did provide employees with access to livestreams of their Ring devices.”
 

TammyinWI

Talk is cheap
Could see this coming a mile away. Have wondered, too, how easily they can tap into store cameras, especially Wal-mart's.

These people are all tied together with the deep state, and the deep state is growing its tentacles.
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
......the pool boy......the landscaper......the meter reader......the milkman......and the POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE !!
LOL But I have to say:

We don't have a pool. I'm the landscaper. The meter does it's own reading. The postman is in a car out at the road on the other side of the fence.

LOL but understand what you are saying. However never saw the movie.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well, my sunbathing was for Cary's eyes only, but now, it's as if the whole world is watching!!!! I gave it up. I got too paranoid.
 

SouthernBreeze

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Well - ahem - you do realize that your sunbathing was being streamed live here on TB2K for the last month, right? We all assumed you knew this and were good with it! You never know who's watching these days...

Best
Doc

Wait! What? I was wondering what all the whispering was about. :D
 

Repairman-Jack

Veteran Member
To clarify before I answer your question, my cameras are mounted on the eaves of the house, covering all sides plus an extra covering the driveway. Their nice wide viewing angles, plus zoom capability, give me full coverage all around the house. One of the cameras occasionally has trouble maintaining a steady connection. To address this we plan to add a couple of wifi repeaters from our internet provider as soon as we can get in to speak to an actual person at our local office.
Wifi cameras are notorious for loss of signal/connection, when possible they should be hardwired.
 
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