Amazon's 'Echo Show' Can Now Watch Your House For You (cnet.com) 57
There's something new in Amazon's video-enabled Echo Show smart speakers. "If you have the version with a built-in camera, you can now turn your Show into a security device..." writes Kim Komando. "Once the monitoring has been set up, you can remotely view the feed from the Alexa app.
CNET reports on Alexa's new "Home Monitoring" setting, "found deep within your Amazon Echo Show's device settings." It doesn't record video and you can only put it where you'd otherwise put a smart display... But still, it's useful for checking in on things, like kids, pets or your house while you're away... it might just replace that security camera you were thinking of buying. Plus, if you have the latest Echo Show 10, you can not only view the camera feed, but you can pan the room left to right (although, unfortunately, not up and down)...
At first, only the new Echo Show 10 could pull it off, but a recent update seems to have changed all that and now the first-gen Echo Show 5 and Echo Show 8 have a Home Monitoring setting (presumably, so will the updated Show 5 and 8 when the arrive June 9)... Setting up your Amazon Echo Show smart display to appear as a security camera in the Alexa app is a bit trickier than enabling most features — for security reasons, you have to set it up on the device itself, not from within the app.
Their article also notes two caveats:
CNET reports on Alexa's new "Home Monitoring" setting, "found deep within your Amazon Echo Show's device settings." It doesn't record video and you can only put it where you'd otherwise put a smart display... But still, it's useful for checking in on things, like kids, pets or your house while you're away... it might just replace that security camera you were thinking of buying. Plus, if you have the latest Echo Show 10, you can not only view the camera feed, but you can pan the room left to right (although, unfortunately, not up and down)...
At first, only the new Echo Show 10 could pull it off, but a recent update seems to have changed all that and now the first-gen Echo Show 5 and Echo Show 8 have a Home Monitoring setting (presumably, so will the updated Show 5 and 8 when the arrive June 9)... Setting up your Amazon Echo Show smart display to appear as a security camera in the Alexa app is a bit trickier than enabling most features — for security reasons, you have to set it up on the device itself, not from within the app.
Their article also notes two caveats:
- You can't record the video.
- There's no quick and easy way to set up motion-alert notifications.
Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
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Nope no nope nope nope.
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... can watch your wife or daughter or girlfriend for you
Anyone have ... (Score:2)
Purely for science, of course.
Re: Anyone have ... (Score:1)
Who is going to watch Amazon for you? (Score:1)
Re: Who is going to watch Amazon for you? (Score:2)
I haven't personally noticed that. But I have seen many dark patterns throughout their UI that tries to trick you into turning Prime on again if you aren't careful. Could that be what happened to you possibly?
You can't record the video (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't worry, Amazon does it for you. And the cops. And the Russian hacker creeps who want to watch your kids.
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Good, that means I don't need to hire a nanny anymore since that stupid Russian hacker creep is doing the job for free!
Can 'now' watch your home? (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't it be closer to the truth to say that a customer can now access a small part of what amazon has already been monitoring via just one of the devices it sells?
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Up next, at Amazon Prime Video (Score:3, Interesting)
Meet Echo. A new reality TV program from Amazon, brought to you by the movie experts from MGM (an Amazon company). Have a peak from a stranger home. What would you see? What will others see from you? Watch it live, or stream now.
lol (Score:5, Informative)
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yeah... why the heck is this posted as a good thing. Sounds off the bat like an extreme security risk if someone does hack it... amazon itself isn't exactly top on my list of companies I'd trust with that capability... then of course, they also have a history with ring of giving access to your video feeds to law enforcement if it's requested... I think I can name 100 reasons why I'd be wanting to get my own camera that only communcates with servers I control. Course that's also why I don't have alexa or google devices in my house.
100% THIS.
Every single bit of it (pun intended).
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not sure why intelligence tests havent been sold this way sooner
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Cameras to monitor the outside of the house, such as the entry doors? Sure.
Cameras to monitor the inside of the house, where you live? No fucking way.
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Do you (not you DontBeAMoran...the generic you) trust the cameras you have on your cell phone, laptop, tablet, TV, etc., or are they all covered?
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Laptops have black stickers on their cameras, cellphones too on their front cameras and I always put them face down to block the external/back camera.
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then of course, they also have a history with ring of giving access to your video feeds to law enforcement if it's requested
Do they actually have a choice legally? I was under the impression they didn't unless they actually wanted to spend their own money to fight it in court.
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You can't record the video. (Score:2, Insightful)
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Are people really this stupid and gullible? You can guarantee that Amazon is recording the video, even if they're not giving *you* access.
...and/or pouring it out a big 'ol inter-tube to the Them.
Re: You can't record the video. (Score:1)
Trash Product (Score:3)
So many better cameras for sale that don't have any ties to Amazon and also record and have motion sensing. Only idiots would buy this.
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"Thank you for your comment; your comments are important to us; your comment will be passed to our software engineers who will quickly examine the problem. Crickets"
That's a good one. (Score:2)
" "If you have the version with a built-in camera, you can now turn your Show into a security device..."
Oooh, so it turns into one. Riiight.
It's like watching the world's largest DDoS Phishing attack reverberate across the frontal lobe of Mass Ignorance.
Sponsored by Amazon Basics.
People Overreacting Once Again (Score:3, Informative)
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In fact, for you to see anything, amazon needs to record it. They record it on their servers and you have no ownership of those recordings. They can do with them as they please, even if it hurts you.
I am sure the police can actually record (Score:2)
And do so without asking you first. What else would this thing be good for? Some hackers will be able to do the same, but without having to ask Amazon first.
In other news, people on the insight-level of early cave-men should not use advanced technology.
Poor angle (Score:3)
The Echo Show is angled facing upwards, as is the camera. It's designed so if you're standing in front of it and it is on a counter, your upper body and head are what is framed. Thus when I turn mine on to view the camera, all I see is the ceiling of the room. So it's pretty much useless for this kind of security.
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This will save me a fortune... (Score:2)
In the Small Print (Score:2)
Companies like Amazon, the big telco's the mobile network operators, all have long-term, multi-year strategies. They know that the public - their market - take time to adjust to new ideas, such that attempts to introduce something too revolutionary may not get traction, or, worse, may get push-back.
But suppose you're Amazon. You sell stuff. You have spent a large fortune harvesting more and more information about your customer, based on exhau
Camera's do not make you secure (Score:2)
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You're entirely missing the point of the primary reason to have one...deterrence. Most criminals do care about evidence that can be used to ID and prosecute them, and will in turn find some other place to do their dirty work.
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Sigh...I don't have an Alexa, I have a different system, and they would know because they'd see my signs and cameras. Sure they can wear masks, but even with that, being videoed they'd leave evidence...race, height, approx weight, their vehicle, etc. Why would anyone with a lick of sense break into a home with a security system when the one next door or down the street has none...unless they're specifically targeting it? The comment about the cat is also strange...virtually every security system around
Caveats (Score:2)
>"Their article also notes two caveats:"
And they omit the most important one- some huge corporation monitoring YOU and YOUR space outside of YOUR real control. Better read all that fine print that changes constantly, trust that they actually do what it says, and trust that it isn't going to be hacked. No thanks.
Gross (Score:1)
you can now turn your Show into a security device. (Score:2)
Kim Komando (Score:2)
Wow, she's still around? I vaguely remember her Sunday at some dumbass time radio show giving boomers advice on what router to buy and how to reset their AOL passwords
What about my TV? (Score:2)
What about my TV? I really need a robot to watch that for me. It would save a lot of time and eyestrain.
So, no change? (Score:2)
You can ask it if there were non-naked figures in your living-room, the naked ones being yourself?
Amazon's 'Echo Show' Wil Now Watch Your House For (Score:1)
Does Youporn already have a category for that? (Score:2)
Well I used telephone porn before I got VHS so I'm happy with regular echo right now.
Opt In or not. (Score:2)