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Amazon's Home Surveillance Company Is Putting Suspected Petty Thieves in its Advertisements (vice.com) 149

Amazon's home surveillance company Ring is using video captured by its doorbell cameras in Facebook advertisements that ask users to identify and call the cops on a woman whom local police say is a suspected thief. From a report: In the video, the woman's face is clearly visible and there is no obvious criminal activity taking place. The Facebook post shows her passing between two cars. She pulls the door handle of one of the cars, but it is locked. The video freezes on a still of the woman's face from two different angles: "If you recognize this woman, please contact the Mountain View Police Department ... please share with your neighbors," text superimposed on the video says. In a post alongside the video, Ring urges residents of Mountain View, California to contact the police department if they recognize her.
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Amazon's Home Surveillance Company Is Putting Suspected Petty Thieves in its Advertisements

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Precrime is just around the corner.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It sounds like you disapprove of our actions.

      This can only be a case of misunderstanding, and you'll be referred for reeducation.

      Don't bother disputing me, my conclusions are pre-certain which is the same thing as fact.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      If you try to open someone's car door or door to their home - it is not pre-crime anymore. You do that, you need to answer some questions. Maybe it was an innocent mistake. If so, that is fine; no harm, no foul. However, it is not wrong to expect an explanation when someone violates your property.

      captcha: honing

      • Re:Hooray (Score:5, Informative)

        by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @05:21PM (#58721874)

        If you try to open someone's car door or door to their home - it is not pre-crime anymore.

        The video shows her jiggling door handles, but according to the police (the police, not Amazon) she was also recorded actually breaking into cars. So, apparently, they have strong evidence that she is a criminal.

        There are many websites that display photos and recordings of suspected criminals. Some even offer rewards for information leading to an arrest.

        There is nothing new or wrong about what Amazon is doing.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      What Martha and I have been saying for ages is that you simply can not trust some sorts of people. Maybe it's the more brown folks, maybe it's the less affluent, maybe it's the less educated. But I think not. Here in Mountain View, CA I'm willing to bet that the person most likely to try and steal from you is Amazon.

      Oh, you won't recognize it as "stealing" so much, because you'll think that you're paying annual Prime fees for that overnight delivery, soon to be a 30 minute drone drop. You'll not be able

  • by known_coward_69 ( 4151743 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:11PM (#58721414)

    yes you can sue, but what are you going to say when they ask you why you did it?

    This is what Ring was made for. To get the images of these people to the public

    • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:15PM (#58721438)
      RING was built to create a national surveillance network that bypasses restrictions on governments doing so.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        yep, a network to find scumbags and thieves that police had no resources to track before

        • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:27PM (#58721544)

          The real scumbags aren't the ones on the streets. Steal $1 billion from MF Global, get elected governor of NJ like Jon "Heroin OD Son" Corzine did. Possibly steal a $100 purse, get your photo plastered all over Facebook, without even absolute evidence of guilt.

          Sell $500 worth of heroin, go to prison for 5 years. Sell billions of opiates like the Sacklers did, get your name on a bunch of med schools and museums.

          • I suppose it depends on your perspective. Property crime is getting much worse around here, and it is such a frustrating crime. The thief gets $20 if they are lucky per break-in and each victim has to pay $500 for repairs, $1000 or whatever for the stolen goods, waste a day dealing with body shop, police, and then feel stressed out for weeks or longer.

            The tiny benefit for the thief is dwarfed so thoroughly by the suffering and damages to the victim it is maddening. If things keep getting worse we will have
            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              Simplest is to make heroin available. They've been experimenting here with good results, junkies knowing they have their next fix becoming productive members of society but the right wingers scream about it.

            • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

              Not as effective as that. Due to health concerns in polluted environments, face masks. It will look odd at first and take a while to adapt, but they simply can not be made illegal because they will improve your health if you use them in metropolitan areas and avoid breathing in germs and other toxic particles.

              Sure police will be able to ask you to show your face but they can not require you to take off the mask, just quickly show your face, the same goes for any commercial premises. Sure they can ask you t

      • by Anonymous Coward

        RING was built to create a national surveillance network that bypasses restrictions on governments doing so.

        What restrictions are you referring to exactly?
        There are no restrictions to police surveillance on public property, which you may not have noticed that is the only type of images being used here.

        If they ever started using imagery from inside homes that the home owners didn't specifically release to the police, then you'll have a complaint.

        Only police department budgets have kept this from being a thing, but not due to any laws.
        If tax payers were OK paying extra for such a budget then it would have happened

      • Yeah, well snitches get ... an additional 10% discount on one Amazon purchase!

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        For people all over the USA and world to see what happens in nice parts of a city.
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 )

      "I wasn't paying attention and I thought it was my car."

      We've all done it. Now we can lose our jobs, our friends, and our ability to rent an apartment for it.

      • except in this case it seems there is a complaint to the police and they have her stealing a purse on camera

        and who uses a key to unlock a car these days when remotes have been around for decades?

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
          I don't think I've owned a car with working keyless entry ... ever -- then again, I tend to drive $3000-special old cars.
          • then you should have no trouble finding your old car in a lot of newer cars

            • Even if she did have keyless entry, it's possible that she thought it didn't work. You still have to pull the door handle, and there's normally an emergency key provided for when it doesn't work.
              • Even if she did have keyless entry, it's possible that she thought it didn't work.

                Then why did she jiggle the door handles of other cars, that looked nothing like "hers"?

                And when she found one unlocked, why didn't she get in and try to drive it if she thought it was hers? Instead, she rummaged through the car looking for stuff to steal.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by dasunt ( 249686 )

          and who uses a key to unlock a car these days when remotes have been around for decades?

          Our current car doesn't have a remote. It is a base model. Although it is over 10 years old at this point.

    • Why? “My mind was elsewhere and I thought it was my car, then I remembered I parked one street over”.

      This is why I won’t touch Ring or any other Amazon networked product. I installed a DoorBird instead: you can pull an RTSP video stream off it for your favourite video surveillance software. And while the app works through Doorbird’s servers, you can set it to “LAN only”, and/or firewall it if you are paranoid: it’ll work just fine without the ability to phone ho
      • Yep -- no need to add to Scumazon or Scroogle's worldwide surveillance networks when there are cloudfree options out there.
      • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:32PM (#58721570)

        Why? "My mind was elsewhere and I thought it was my car, then I remembered I parked one street over".

        The fact they only show you a short bit of video with no obvious criminal activity taking place doesn't mean there is no other video of the same person doing something actually criminal. She may be less identifiable in that video; her face may be partially obscured or some other issue. They're showing the video where the identification can be best made, not the only video available.

        You incorrectly assume that the only action this woman was seen taking was pulling on one car door handle. I'm sure that Amazon's lawyers have had a look at this ad, like every ad, and have vetted the claims it makes.

        Turn off smart quotes in your posting.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Someone did this to my car many years ago. They actually ended up levering the door open, presumably with a crowbar, but it was just out of shot so all we go on tape was them trying the door handles.

          The cops weren't that interested, despite the video evidence. Apparently in the past when it went to court the suspect just claimed that they were drunk and mistook the car for their own, and there is no proof they took a crowbar to it. You need really direct evidence of a crime taking place for a conviction.

      • by dissy ( 172727 )

        Why? âoeMy mind was elsewhere and I thought it was my car, then I remembered I parked one street overâ.

        Exactly, we've all done it. I frequently forget what street I park my two car garage and it's contents on :P

      • Why? “My mind was elsewhere and I thought it was my car, then I remembered I parked one street over”.

        If that's why the police want you for questioning than so be it. Turn yourself in and talk to them, until then you're a suspect in the eyes of the police.

    • Even if they were guilty of breaking into the car that doesn't give Amazon the rights to profit from using their image without permission in advertising.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by QuietLagoon ( 813062 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:11PM (#58721416)
    This tactic is way too wide open to abuse, whether intended or not.
    • What tactic?

    • Police asking for information leading to people who are suspects who are wanted for questioning?

      Well abuse away. We've been "abusing" this since the days before electricity.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      There is already a problem with people calling the cops because someone was doing X while black. Making their abuse more anonymous and easier to get away with isn't going to improve the situation.

      In the UK there is a crime called "wasting police time" which is sometimes used against people who do that kind of thing. Is there nothing in the US to prevent people using he cops as a form of harassment?

  • That is pretty good advertising. If you are out in public you can be on video and it can be posted anywhere, anytime by anyone. If we don't like it, we need to change the laws. Also, pulling a car handle is a potential sign of "obvious criminal activity".

  • Identify her as Jeff Bezos' ex-wife, mother, or daughter.
  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:29PM (#58721554)

    Love the clickbaity inflammatory headline. "Home Surveillance Company"

    Niiiiiice.

    Carry on, whether your clickbaity headline will stir the insta-outrage you so clearly want remains to be seen.

    I guess "Home Security Company" just doesn't have the same triggering effect.

    • They're a "Home Surveillance Company" now. That's is what they are advertising.
      • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
        I can't find a single thing that says that. Everything I find refers to it as home security. They do offer surveillance, but nothing calls them a surveillance company.
        • "Home Surveillance Company" is a phrase synonymous [oxforddictionaries.com] with "home security" when the subject is surveillance.

          1) (of a word or phrase) having the same meaning as another word or phrase in the same language.

          2) Closely associated with or suggestive of something. ‘his deeds had made his name synonymous with victory’

          You get a D-minus as a Slashdot Pedant.

          • by Xenx ( 2211586 )
            First, /. doesn't deign to update me when someone responds to me any more. I have to remember to check messages. So, this is a bit dated now. But, you deserve to be put in your place given your complete disregard.

            When the original comment is about specific word choice, word choice fucking matters. There is no pedantry involved. Surveillance and security aren't synonyms. Further, I get that you're trying to say a surveillance company is synonymous with a security company. The truth is, it's not the same thi
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @05:09PM (#58721792)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Are there no laws governing this kind of equipment in the US?

        Ring doorbells are pretty much illegal in the UK. When you set up CCTV at home you have an obligation to make sure it only captures stuff happening on your property and doesn't invade other people's privacy, i.e. it's not able to see them coming and going or look into their windows.

        Given the fixed nature of the Ring camera, typically facing out towards the street and other properties, there is no practical way to comply with those requirements.

  • by FudRucker ( 866063 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @04:46PM (#58721638)
    or they can be sued for millions, which would be well deserved
    • or they can be sued for millions, which would be well deserved

      Nope. No evidence required. The police want her for questioning and there's nothing preventing them from publishing a photo taken of said person. If people could be sued for millions for this it would have been done by now ... except they'd have been sued for 10s of thousands because that was a lot of money in the 1800s when this practice was used far more widely.

  • Considering that Amazon is probably one of the biggest "victims" of porch piracy it makes sense that they would want to put these scumbags on display. I welcome Ring's availability to expose these assholes. I live in Portland, OR where porch piracy by the homeless and worthless tweakers (not necessarily mutually exclusive) is a major issue. I think Aamzon/Ring should set up an easy way for you to upload videos of criminals actively committing a crime for everyone to see. We also need more people doing stuf
  • This is probably sponsored content. Manufactured controversy to raise product awareness. Now millions of people will read about it in the press. Many will look it up and many will buy it. Journalists run fake stories like this for $500 to a few thousand, sometimes a commissiin which can end up enormous. I used to have a job helping to fabricate controversial tech stories for big money. Whenever you see blatant controversy you should be skeptical. The same for stories about things like books, someone is ofte
  • by irving47 ( 73147 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @05:02PM (#58721746) Homepage

    This is a good one!

    Does she have a reasonable expectation of privacy where this was taken?
    OR
    Is her likeness being used in a commercial application without permission or compensation?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Perhaps she should walk into a police station to file a report.

    • Is her likeness being used in a commercial application

      You're going to have trouble convincing people that this is a commercial application simply because the name that sponsored the advertisement. I can't see any logo, I can't see any product advertisement. What I can see is a standard practice that has been used since the 1800s.

  • If the police is already looking for the individual in the ad then I have no problems with it. It would be no different than the picture in the post office or on the news.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      If they are and know who it is. If they have to make a case based on eyewitness identification, their case might be screwed up. I'd say leave the photo publication up to the cops.

  • It would be one thing for the police department to issue a press release asking for the public's help.

    When this gets commercialized WITHOUT the request of a police agency, it makes me question the motivation and integrity of the commercial entity.

    When it gets commercialized AT THE REQUEST of a police agency but the overall tone is still promotional, it makes me question the integrity of the police department.

    About the only way for this to work is if it's done as a public service announcement created by the

    • by Flentil ( 765056 )

      Sorry, we don't need *The Government* to post pics of criminals when we can just do it ourselves, or let Amazon do it. So what if it's a selling tactic for them. They're not the ones stealing the packages. Lock those criminals up, and take those who have a problem with it to task for having poor moral judgement.

      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        we don't need *The Government* to post pics of criminals when we can just do it ourselves

        And then they catch someone. And they drag him into court. But his defense attorney says that your post contaminated eyewitness recollections. Because maybe they picked the guy out of a lineup because they saw your post. And the judge throws the case out. And the prosecutor says, "Thanks a lot, buddy. You just screwed up our case."

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Thursday June 06, 2019 @05:14PM (#58721830) Journal

    The weird thing is, I've seen these things out on store shelves for a long time, but just didn't want to spend the money for one. And really, I didn't even know anyone else who had one either. But now, it feels like they just suddenly exploded in popularity?

    Just the other day, I decided to look into a video doorbell because my $10 battery operated wireless doorbell and chime stopped working. Probably just needed a new battery in the button part mounted by the door, but even the white plastic button casing was yellowing, and the weird battery it took probably cost as much as a whole new doorbell. I just had a frustrating incident, too, where FedEx kept claiming nobody was home to sign for a package I was waiting on, despite me working from home those days and knowing nobody actually knocked on my door. (My dog barks up a storm if you even go into the yard, but not a peep out of her.)

    I figured it was time to get a doorbell that could let me know with video if someone was really at my door or not.

    I couldn't find anything for sale, off the shelf, that looked like a better value than the "Ring" product, so I bought their $99 720p video model. (For $200-ish, you can get high res 4K video but that really seemed like overkill for my needs.)

    Not more than an hour after I got it home, my wife gets all excited about it and tells me how all of her co-workers have Ring doorbells now and share any odd videos with each other, etc. etc. A day after I set ours up, I see people discussing another one someone in town used to capture video of a drunk lady who kept ringing their bell in the middle of the night, apparently incorrectly thinking it was her house. The "Neighbors" feature in it shows a bunch of them in my neighborhood that have reported various odd things (including weird animals in people's yards).

    I also saw a big article on Medium.com by some guy slamming the Ring devices as being "racist". He was on some big rant how they're mostly owned and used by wealthier people and unfairly pass around photos of the "undesirables" who are usually minorities in cities, etc. etc. Uh .... ok .... just not buying THAT one.

    But yeah, I *do* think Amazon needs to realize that a lot of Ring users seem to be sharing videos NOT just because they think they're helping catch criminals like a digital neighborhood watch program.... Most of what I've seen has been more along the lines of, "Check out the crazy thing that just happened on MY property!"

  • This is a great way to get back at that skanky girlfriend who dumped you because she didn't like staying with you at the bar until bar time every night.
  • That's Becky, she's been running around CA raising money to start a large e-commerce company and just recently brought some high-tech home security cameras to market...... no wait, that's not right...

    Oh I know! That's Marjorie, she's a journalist, and just started doing research on the working conditions at Amazon warehouses, and her last story highlighted all the counterfeit problems Amazon has been having....... wait, no that's not right....

    I Got it! That's the high end hooker 'ol Bezos has been "working

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