Ring doorbells: Won’t you see my neighbor? (Lock and Code S07E05)
嗯,用户让我帮忙总结一篇文章的内容,控制在一百个字以内,而且不需要用“文章内容总结”之类的开头。首先,我需要仔细阅读这篇文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是亚马逊旗下的Ring公司在超级碗上推广了一个新功能“Search Party”,利用AI技术搜索丢失的宠物。但公众担心这可能被用来追踪人,引发隐私问题。还有提到Ring设备的数据被警方使用,用户可能并不知情。 接下来,我需要把这些要点浓缩到100字以内。重点包括:超级碗广告、新功能、隐私担忧、警方使用数据。确保语言简洁明了。 然后,检查是否符合用户的要求:没有使用特定的开头词,控制在字数限制内。最后,通读一遍确保流畅自然。 </think> 亚马逊旗下的Ring公司通过超级碗广告推广智能门铃的新功能“Search Party”,利用AI技术搜索丢失宠物引发隐私担忧。公众质疑该技术可能用于追踪个人,并关注Ring设备数据被警方使用的问题。 2026-3-8 22:55:35 Author: www.malwarebytes.com(查看原文) 阅读量:2 收藏

This week on the Lock and Code podcast…

On February 8, during the Super Bowl in the United States, countless owners of one of the most popular smart products today got a bit of a wakeup call: Their Ring doorbells could be used to see a whole lot more than they knew.

In a commercial that was broadcast to one of most reliably enormous audiences in the country, Amazon, which owns the company Ring, promoted a new feature for its smart doorbells called “Search Party.” By scouring the footage of individual Ring cameras across a specific region, “Search Party” can implement AI-powered image recognition technology to find, as the commercial portrayed it, a lost dog. But immediately after the commercial aired, people began wondering what else their Ring cameras could be used to find.

As US Senator Ed Markey wrote on social media:

“Ring’s Super Bowl ad exposed a scary truth: the technology in its doorbell cameras could be used to hunt down a lost pet…or a person. Amazon must discontinue its dystopian monitoring features.”

These “dystopian monitoring features” aren’t entirely new, but that’s not to say that most Ring owners knew what they were allowing when they originally bought their devices.

Bought by Amazon in 2018, Ring is the most popular manufacturer of a product that, as of 15 years ago, didn’t really exist. And while other “smart” innovations failed, smart doorbells have become a fixture of American neighborhoods, providing a mixture of convenience and security. For instance, a Ring owner away from home can verify and buzz in their mailman dropping off a package behind a gated entrance. Or, a Ring owner can see on their phone that the person knocking at their door is a salesman and choose to avoid talking to them. Or, a Ring owner can help police who are investigating a crime in their area by handing over relevant footage. Even the presence of a Ring doorbell, and its variety of motion-detecting alerts, could possibly serve as a deterrent to crime.

What has seemingly upset so many of those same owners, then, is learning exactly how their personal devices might be used for a company’s gains.

Today, on the Lock and Code podcast with host David Ruiz, we speak with Matthew Guariglia, senior policy analyst at Electronic Frontier Foundation, about Ring’s long history of partnering with—and sometimes even speaking directly for—police, who can access Ring doorbell footage both inside the company and outside it, and what people really open themselves up to when purchasing a Ring device.

 ”There’s this impression, a myth practically, that ‘I buy a ring doorbell to put on my house, I control the footage… But there is [an] entire secondary use of this device, which is by police that you don’t really get a lot of say in.”

Tune in today to listen to the full conversation.

Show notes and credits:

Intro Music: “Spellbound” by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Outro Music: “Good God” by Wowa (unminus.com)


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文章来源: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/podcast/2026/03/ring-doorbells-wont-you-see-my-neighbor-lock-and-code-s07e05
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