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Amazon faces class action over Ring facial recognition

Created at 3 Jun · 11:36 PM1 source↑ Market-relevant
IN SHORT

Amazon is facing a class-action lawsuit seeking $5 million in damages over its Ring doorbell's "Familiar Faces" facial recognition feature. Filed in Seattle, the suit argues that visitors' facial data is collected without their consent, violating privacy laws. Privacy advocates and lawmakers have previously criticized the feature for its surveillance implications.

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Key Numbers

$5 milliondamages sought in lawsuit
5 millioncustomers' Ring camera data accessed in prior FTC settlement

Who's Involved

Amazon
Defendant in class-action lawsuit over Ring facial recognition
Charles Sigwalt
Plaintiff in class-action lawsuit filed in Seattle
Ring
Amazon subsidiary whose doorbell cameras are subject to lawsuit
EFF
Advocacy group that previously criticized the "Familiar Faces" feature
Ed Markey
U.S. Senator who warned about privacy risks of the feature
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
Regulator that previously settled with Ring over data access issues

↳ Why This Matters

This lawsuit highlights the ongoing tension between the convenience of AI-powered home security features and individual privacy rights, potentially impacting the deployment and regulation of facial recognition technology in consumer devices.

Key facts

  • Amazon faces a class-action lawsuit over its Ring doorbell's "Familiar Faces" facial recognition feature.
  • The lawsuit was filed in Seattle by Virginia resident Charles Sigwalt.
  • The suit seeks $5 million in damages.
  • The "Familiar Faces" feature uses AI to identify regular visitors to a Ring owner's home.
  • The lawsuit argues that visitors' facial data is collected without their consent.

Amazon has been hit with a class-action lawsuit in Seattle, seeking $5 million in damages, over the facial recognition capabilities of its Ring video doorbell cameras. The lawsuit, filed by Virginia resident Charles Sigwalt, targets the "Familiar Faces" feature, which uses AI to identify regular visitors like family members, mail carriers, or delivery drivers. The core of the legal challenge is the assertion that visitors' facial data is collected without their explicit consent, a practice that privacy advocates and lawmakers have previously flagged as a violation of privacy laws. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) had previously criticized the feature upon its announcement, noting that many biometric privacy laws require affirmative consent before facial recognition data can be collected. U.S. Senator Ed Markey also expressed concerns last year, warning of expanded surveillance and privacy risks. This lawsuit follows previous controversies involving Ring, including a partnership with Flock for a "Search Party" feature that was criticized for surveillance implications and a settlement with the FTC exceeding $5 million due to employees accessing customer camera data.

Frequently asked questions

It is an AI-powered feature that scans and identifies regular visitors to a Ring owner's home, providing specific notifications instead of generic ones.

Amazon is being sued because the lawsuit alleges that the "Familiar Faces" feature collects visitors' facial recognition data without their consent, violating privacy laws.

The lawsuit is seeking $5 million in damages.

Yes, Ring has faced criticism from privacy advocates and lawmakers regarding its facial recognition technology and data access policies.

What Happens Next

01The court will rule on the class-action lawsuit's claims.
02Further legal proceedings may occur regarding consent for facial recognition data collection.

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Cadence

How It Developed

3 Jun · 6:35 PM
Amazon faces a $5 million class-action lawsuit over Ring's "Familiar Faces" facial recognition feature, alleging privacy violations.
Mashable via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Amazon faces class action suit over Ring facial recognition featurem.piqsuite.com

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