Police will Livestream Ring Camera Footage of Mississippi Residents!

Police will Livestream Ring Camera Footage of Mississippi Residents!

A Mississippi, US pilot program that allows police to livestream private camera footage has triggered privacy fears from the ACLU.

Police in Mississippi are testing a program in which they can livestream video footage from private security cameras – including Ring doorbell cameras – installed at private homes & businesses.

Cameras

The program in Jackson, Miss., to use the Ring door cameras as part of surveillance efforts, is being described as a ‘new way’ to help police fight rising crime, according to a report in the Jackson Free Press.

However, the move is also sounding an alarm  with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), & other privacy advocates who worry over surveillance issues.

Partnered

Police have partnered with 2 technology companies – Jackson-based tech consulting company PILEUM, & Georgia-based cloud services provider Fusus to let law enforcement to access private camera surveillance of residents or businesses who agreed to participate in the 45-day program.

If private participants allow, the city now has permission to access those cameras through the platform & could use the data collected to track criminal activity.

The ACLU, however, called the launch of the program its “worst fears” being “confirmed,” in a Tues. blog post by ACLU Policy Analyst Matthew Guariglia.

The privacy watchdog group has long worried that using Amazon-owned Ring cameras for police surveillance is disastrous for people’s privacy & an overreach of authority by local law enforcement.

Ring

However, a Ring spokesperson explained, “this is not a Ring program & Ring is not working with any of the companies or the city in connection with this program.”

Even though the camera owners agree to participate in the program, cameras such as Ring often capture footage of people in the vicinity also going about their daily business, people who likely did not agree to have their moves watched by law enforcement, Guariglia wrote.

“The footage from your front door includes you coming & going from your house, your neighbours taking out the trash, & the dog walkers & delivery people who do their jobs in your street,” according to the post.

Live Streamed

“In Jackson, this footage can now be live streamed directly onto a dozen monitors scrutinised by police around the clock. Even if you refuse to allow your footage to be used that way, your neighbour’s camera pointed at your house may still be transmitting directly to the police.”

The use of residents’ personal Ring cameras is a ‘sneaky’ way for police to build a CCTV surveillance network in neighbourhoods without having to invest financially or build trust in the community in terms of transparency.

Surveillance Equipment

“It allows police depts. to avoid the cost of buying surveillance equipment & to put that burden onto consumers by convincing them they need cameras to keep their property safe,” Guariglia observed.

“2nd, it evades the natural reaction of fear & distrust that many people would have if they learned police were putting up dozens of cameras on their block, 1 for every house.”

Neighbourhood Watch

The Jackson pilot program comes slightly more than a year after Amazon-owned Ring announced that it was starting a “new neighbourhood watch” effort to allow homeowners to provide voluntary access to camera footage to officers.

In the event of an incident, police could request the video recorded by homeowners’ cameras for a specific geographic area & time range–but homeowners can decline the requests. To date, Ring has partnered with more than 1,000 police depts. across the US.

Incurred Criticism

These partnerships already incurred criticism from over 30 privacy & consumer advocacy groups, including the ACLU, who urged local legislators to intervene in doorbell-camera company Ring’s partnerships with law enforcement.

Now that this move has gone a step further into active, 24-hour-a-day surveillance in Jackson, the ACLU is urging city officials to push back against the overreach of law enforcement, quoting the city’s move a few months ago to become the 1st in the southern United States to ban police use of face recognition technology.

“If police want to build a surveillance camera network, they should only do so in ways that are transparent & accountable, & ensure active resident participation in the process,” Guariglia wrote. “If residents say no to spy cameras, then police must not deploy them.”

Flaws

Since creation, Amazon-owned Ring has come under fire for flaws in the system that could allow video & data collected by the system to be used by threat players, as well as its own ‘dodgy’ data-collection practices.

In 2019, Amazon patched a vulnerability in the smart doorbell that could have allowed attackers to access the owner’s Wi-Fi network credentials & potentially reconfigure the device to launch an attack on the home network.

US Senators

Several days later, 5 US Senators demanded in a letter to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos that Amazon disclose how it’s securing Ring home-security device footage–and who is allowed to access that footage.

In Oct., Ring raised privacy worries again when it unveiled the new Always Home Cam, a smart home security camera drone that flies around homes taking security footage  of people inside their own homes. Due to Amazon’s already questionable data-collection practices, privacy advocates worry that the footage could fall into the wrong hands.

https://www.cybernewsgroup.co.uk/virtual-conference-november-2020/

 

 

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