Categories: GADGET

Ring calls off partnership with police surveillance provider Flock Safety


Ring has canceled its partnership with Flock Safety, after receiving backlash for running a Super Bowl ad touting its Search Party feature. If you’ll recall, Ring revealed back in October 2025 that it was entering a partnership with the surveillance company, which would make it possible for law enforcement to ask smart doorbell owners for videos captured by their devices. In its announcement, the company said that the “planned Flock Safety integration would require significantly more time and resources than anticipated.” The decision to call off the partnership was mutual, Ring added, and Flock Safety’s integration was never launched. Apparently, no Ring customer footage was ever sent to Flock.

Under the partnership, law enforcement agencies using Flock’s Nova platform or FlockOS would have been able to use Ring’s Community Requests to ask for doorbell videos from users. They would have been asked to specify the location and timeframe of the incident, as well as provide a unique investigation code and the details about what is being investigated. Their requests would then be forwarded to relevant users, who could choose to share footage from their doorbell. Ring said the whole process would have been anonymous and optional.

Ring was known to have shared security cam videos to law enforcement without a court order or the device owner’s consent at least 11 times in the past. In 2024, however, it seemed to have walked back its police-friendly stance and said that it would stop sharing videos with the police without a warrant. This alliance with Flock would have marked a return to police collaboration after the company distanced itself from law enforcement. Flock is known for its automatic license plate readers and for centralizing the information it collects into a database that police can search without a warrant. While law enforcement says the system can help them solve crimes like kidnapping. 404Media reported last year that ICE has been using the database, citing immigration-related reasons.

While Ring’s official reason was that the Flock partnership would need more resources than expected, it’s worth noting that the company recently got flak for its Super Bowl Search Party ad. Ring touted it as a way to find lost dogs by using its cameras’ AI to identify pets running across their field of vision and then pooling feeds together to identify missing pets. While Search Party isn’t new and was announced last year, the ad sparked concerns about surveillance and how the tech could be misused, leading users to disable the feature for their cameras altogether.



Source link

Mainedigitalnews.com

Share
Published by
Mainedigitalnews.com

Recent Posts

Slow-Motion Gives Forced Migrants the Chance to Move at Their Own Speed

By Dmitrii Zenkov. To make theatre with forced migrants in Serbia, Dmitrii Zenkov knew he…

1 day ago

Rangers 2026 draft lottery odds

Breakup day has come and gone with little fanfare and only one real “interesting” piece…

1 day ago

Bitcoin Drops to $74K as US-Iran Tensions Flare

Bitcoin erased its weekend gains as it fell below $74,000 on Sunday after the US…

1 day ago

Michael Jackson film set to be a controversial hit

All the same, the allegations remain a part of Jackson's life story, complicating the attempt…

1 day ago

Will college get fixed? – Marginal REVOLUTION

That is the topic of my latest Free Press column.  Here is one excerpt: So…

1 day ago

Recognizing Early Expression in Multilingual Young Children

contributed by Iryna Liusik, Early Childhood Educator — Linguistics & Emotional Development Series note: This…

1 day ago