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- Claim Text
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Last month, amid escalating violence committed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, social media users called on customers to dump Ring's products, as the company's partnership with Flock posed the possibility that ICE could access its footage.
- Simplified Text
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Social media users called on customers to dump Ring's products last month
- Confidence Score
- 0.950
- Claim Maker
- The author
- Context Type
- News Article
- Context Details
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{ "month": "Last month", "action": "dump Ring's products", "entity": "Ring" } - Subject Tags
- UUID
- a1164248-2a6a-41d6-8fc4-a12412c28597
- Vector Index
- ✗ No vector
- Created
- February 15, 2026 at 3:35 PM (3 months ago)
- Last Updated
- February 15, 2026 at 3:35 PM (3 months ago)
Original Sources for this Claim (3)
All source submissions that originally contained this claim.
Ring's new 'Search Party' feature uses AI to find lost pets, sparking concerns about potential misuse by law enforcement. Critics worry about the technology's implications for civil liberties, given Ring's history of sharing footage with police.
Ring, the Amazon-owned home security company, ended its partnership with Flock Safety after criticism of its Super Bowl ad promoting a new feature. The move is seen as a win for privacy, given Ring's history of privacy violations and partnerships with law enforcement.
This article discusses privacy concerns surrounding smart home cameras, particularly Ring and Google Nest. It examines how footage is accessed by law enforcement and the companies themselves, and what homeowners can do to protect their data. The article also touches on the controversy surrounding Ring's new 'Search Party' feature.
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