Ring,phim sex dit chi everyone's least favorite technological narc, seems to be making steps to keep its footage secure.
The Amazon-owned home security system company now offers end-to-end encryption of the video and audio collected on its battery-powered video doorbells and security cameras. This comes about a year after it enabled end-to-end encryption on its plug-in devices.
End-to-end encryption prevents anyone from grabbing videos or messages as they travel between you and the person you're sending them to. That means it ensures that no one — including hackers, government officials, or, ideally, the company that owns the device — can read your message or watch your video while it's being sent.
This newly enabled privacy feature also means the video picked up from a Ring camera can only be accessible from the iOS or Android device linked to an owner's account. According to the Verge, if you have end-to-end encryption enabled on your Ring camera, no one but you can access the recorded footage. This change is basically increasing the security features on Ring, which already encrypts video and audio recordings by default when they're uploaded to the cloud or stored on Ring's servers.
"Even if law enforcement asked Ring, or its parent company Amazon, for the video, they couldn't provide it," according to the Verge. "Only the enrolled mobile device can unlock the video."
SEE ALSO: 14 reasons not to get a Ring cameraAs Mashable previously explained, end-to-end encryption "basically takes your message, jumbles it up, sends it, and unjumbles it once it reaches your recipient. So anyone who tries to intercept your message in between you and your recipient just gets a bunch of mess instead of the message itself."
That doesn't mean your Ring video cameras are completely harmless or safe from bad actors, though. End-to-end encryption protects your privacy against anything trying to mess with your messages while they're in transit, but it doesn't protect the video metadata and also can't do anything about the recipient of your message sharing whatever information you send them.
And, ultimately, even with end-to-end encryption, there are plenty of problemstied to having a video camera doorbell like Ring.
Topics Cameras
Elon Musk still thinks he's 'reasonably popular' on TwitterPeacock's free tier is now unavailable for new customersAll the tech companies laying off employees in 2023How are we regulating ChatGPT and other AI tools?Samsung Galaxy S23 vs. iPhone 14: Comparing specs and prices'Hamilton' deleted songs: How to put them back in the narrativeSamsung Galaxy Unpacked livestream: How to watch the event livePeacock's free tier is now unavailable for new customers'The Brothers Bloom': A perfect postMarisha Ray talks Keyleth's trial by fire in 'The Legend of Vox Machina' Stephen King has strong words following Trump's tweet about Omarosa Eric Trump tweets that he hates ‘disloyal people’ and is swiftly reminded of his own family The internet can't handle Nick Jonas and Priyanka Chopra's engagement Your skin will thank you for using a toner Russell Crowe gets annoyed with all those LinkedIn requests, too A black bear strolled into a liquor store in Connecticut Kimberly Guilfoyle's pet name for Don Jr. is apparently 'Junior Mint' Kim Kardashian's bizarre Yeezy photo shoot was made for memes Local Twitter is the extremely basic rebuttal to your snobby and toxic Twitter feed The website for Vermont's 14
0.231s , 8072.8828125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【phim sex dit chi】Amazon's Ring video doorbells now have end,Global Hot Topic Analysis