Home › Forums › Open Discussion › Ai surveilance of your neighborhood
- This topic has 2 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 1 day, 7 hours ago by CB450.
-
AuthorPosts
-
December 1, 2025 at 6:12 pm #1136445
johnwayne10101ParticipantStarting TODAY 1/12/2025
If you or a neighbor has a ring doorbell, congrats, you are now being scanned into a database and all your movements are being tracked by the company “flock safety” that added ai to ring doorbells. but not just you, every car thar drives by. And everybody on foot will also be scanned into the nationwide ai database, stripping away your rights to privacy, more and more, the longer the ring doorbell stays up. It can recognize patterns in when you come and go from your home and loads of other privacy invasive tactics. Do you want this in your neighborhood? Spread awareness about this to your friends, family and others. Copy this message or screenshot it to send to other groups, chats etc. Fight for your freedom to walk outside without surveilance
December 11, 2025 at 2:21 am #1137105
cjboffoliParticipantCan you imagine the amount of storage and bandwidth it would take to transit video footage 24/7 from every RING doorbell camera (to number of which is easily 10+ million at this point)? Not to mention how cumbersome it would be to log and organize all of that footage. In truth, footage is NOT automatically transmitted anywhere. Law enforcement can make specific requests (about defined incidents) to people who have opted in. And consent is required. There is no automatic transmission of any footage sent to law enforcement without the permission of the homeowner.
December 24, 2025 at 6:43 pm #1138310
CB450ParticipantThis is a mischaracterization of the capabilities of these systems. The devices themselves detect motion and activity like people and vehicles and send only those relevant clips for processing. When you view the clips in the app they are streaming from the cloud so clearly the bandwidth capabilities exist. The video is then further processed and indexed for things like face, gait, and vehicle identification. This is much smaller than the raw video which can be deleted after it is fingerprinted. Ring has already been in trouble for misusing the video footage they record from user devices. This is not new or mysterious capability. It’s pedestrian, literally.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
