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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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- AI Headline
- What Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home Cameras
- Simplified Title
- Homeowners Understand Smart Home Camera Privacy Concerns
- AI Excerpt
- 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.
- Subject Tags
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Smart Home Cameras Privacy Surveillance Ring Google Nest Data Security Law Enforcement Artificial Intelligence
- Context Type
- Analysis
- AI Confidence Score
-
1.000
- Context Details
-
{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "data_cited" ] }
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Completed
- Submitted By
- Donato V. Pompo
- Submission Date
- February 14, 2026 at 4:34 PM
- Metadata
-
{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "4947f073812b758bff86a6c6ff1537d23ef764f167f575f6b9a0fe9b02679d14", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2026\/02\/11\/realestate\/smart-home-cameras-nest-ring-privacy.html?campaign_id=9&emc=edit_nn_20260214&instance_id=171097&nl=the-morning®i_id=122976029&segment_id=215262&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337", "parsed_content": "AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTWhat Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home CamerasA new Super Bowl ad is raising questions about the power of doorbell cameras.Listen to this article \u00b7 6:41 min Learn moreShare full articleCredit...Smith Collection\/Gado\/Getty ImagesBy Dorie ChevlenFeb. 11, 2026On Sunday, a Super Bowl ad promoting a new A.I.-powered \u201cSearch Party\u201d feature for Amazon\u2019s Ring camera, which activates all the cameras in a neighborhood to find lost dogs, was met with condemnation from Democratic politicians, right wing talking heads and thousands of social media users. The criticism came weeks after Ring announced a partnership with Flock Safety, a company that sells license-plate scanning devices and software, raising concerns that it could soon be used by ICE agents.And yesterday, authorities released Google Nest video taken the night of Nancy Guthrie\u2019s abduction from her home showing a masked man at her front door. It is not clear yet why the footage took over a week to retrieve.These developments have many wondering what a smart security camera or doorbell does, who has access to the video they take \u2014 and what homeowners can do to secure their own data.What are you opting into with a smart security camera?A smart security camera promises a remote way to screen visitors, monitor pets and track package deliveries (or the porch pirates who are stealing them). Different models offer different functions however: Some cameras store video locally, meaning inside the camera or on a hub in your home, which is better for data security but also creates limits, including limits on how much video can be stored and access to more advanced features like A.I. detection. Other smart cameras may let you store video in the cloud, which allows you to access footage even if the camera is stolen or damaged.Is my footage private?It depends. As Wirecutter reported last week in response to questions about Ring\u2019s possible cooperation with ICE (which the company has denied), all security camera makers may be compelled by law to share some recordings. Subpoenas, search warrants and court orders, for example, could all result in Ring, Nest or other companies handing over your video or audio. In some cases, this has included not just outdoor camera footage, but indoor as well.Companies can also share your videos at the request of law enforcement if a situation is deemed an emergency (one in which someone is in immediate danger of death or serious injury). And some companies, like Amazon Ring and Google Nest acknowledge that in some cases they may not disclose having shared user videos with authorities, because of legal restrictions in some instances.Why are people concerned about Ring\u2019s new feature?ImageA screen grab from Ring\u2019s Super Bowl ad suggested the abilities of neighborhood cameras to be turned on to search for a lost dog. Credit...RingIn an ad for Amazon\u2019s Ring camera that ran during the Super Bowl, a new A.I.-powered feature called \u201cSearch Party\u201d helps reunite a tearful little girl with her missing dog by activating all the cameras in the neighborhood to find him. The feature works by using A.I. to scan video captured by all the participating Ring cameras in a neighborhood, pinging the device\u2019s user should the reported dog pass in view. The device\u2019s user can then notify the pet\u2019s owner (they can also decline).Scores of posters online have decried Ring\u2019s new feature as dystopian and terrifying. In a rare unifying moment, members of the political right and left expressed their discontent. Senator Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, posted on X: \u201cThis definitely isn\u2019t about dogs \u2014 it\u2019s about mass surveillance.\u201d And the conservative commentator Stephen L. Miller wrote, \u201cThe Ring cam lost dog ad is just propaganda for mass surveillance.\u201dThe company has clarified its employees \u201care not able to view, access, or control live streams.\u201d Instead, Ring\u2019s A.I. program analyzes videos automatically; if you\u2019re notified that one of your videos is a match for the missing dog, you have to agree for it to be shared with whomever started the Search Party.How often do authorities take security camera footage?ImageCredit...Seth Wenig\/Associated PressAmazon\u2019s Ring cameras and Google\u2019s Nest cameras are owned by tens of millions of people, and the security camera footage for most of them is left alone. However, a number of users each year do have their content shared, and usually without notification.Every six months Amazon releases a report on Ring\u2019s law enforcement information requests. In the most recently available one (spanning July through December 2025) the company received 2,276 search-warrant information requests, 303 subpoenas, 33 court orders and another 3,013 information-preservation requests. Of those, Ring shared content (video, audio or other) for 1,077 of the requests and other data in 1,535 instances. Of those, only 653 Ring camera users were notified.In October of 2025, Ring announced a partnership with Flock Safety, a company that sells license-plate scanning devices and software. Ring has not specified when the partnership will go into effect, but it has said device owners will only have their footage shared if they volunteer it \u2014 the sharing of footage would be one-way, both companies have said.Google Nest also tracks law enforcement information requests, but after 2019 it stopped publishing a transparency report limited just to Nest. It now folds that data into its general report for all Google products.In the case of Ms. Guthrie, who did not pay for a Google Nest subscription, historical footage would probably have been stored only on a server, or across several servers, somewhere in one of Google\u2019s data centers. It is possible that law enforcement was able to access it using a warrant or without one, as per their terms, since the case could be considered an exigent circumstance.Can I limit how my data is used and shared?In their guide to securing your security cameras, Wirecutter points out that beyond the manufacturers themselves, people should worry about hackers or stalkers accessing their camera footage. When possible, they advise, enable two-factor authorization and end-to-end encryption (if available), use unique passwords and disable access to accounts that allow shared access.Less common, but still concerning, are cases where a security camera company or its employees access your data. To prevent that, you can enable end-to-end encryption, which restricts viewing only to the owner of the video on a specifically authorized device. The downside of doing this is that you often forfeit features of the device; on Ring, this includes shared user access to video, A.I. video search, 24\/7 recording, and live view from mobile devices, among others.Neither Nest nor Ring has yet responded to a request for comment.Dorie Chevlen covers real estate and the housing industry for The Times, and writes about home design and d\u00e9cor for Wirecutter.Read 274 commentsShare full articleRelated ContentAdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENT", "ai_headline": "What Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home Cameras", "ai_simplified_title": "Homeowners Understand Smart Home Camera Privacy Concerns", "ai_excerpt": "This article discusses privacy concerns surrounding smart home cameras, particularly Ring and Google Nest. 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- February 14, 2026 at 4:34 PM
- Updated At
- February 15, 2026 at 5:11 PM
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<html lang="en" class="story nytapp-vi-article nytapp-vi-story story nytapp-vi-article " data-nyt-compute-assignment="fallback" xmlns:og="http://opengraphprotocol.org/schema/" data-rh="lang,class"><head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>What Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home Cameras - The New York Times</title> <meta data-rh="true" name="robots" content="noarchive, max-image-preview:large"><meta data-rh="true" name="description" content="A new Super Bowl ad is raising questions about the power of doorbell cameras."><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:url" content="https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/11/realestate/smart-home-cameras-nest-ring-privacy.html"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:title" content="What Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home Cameras"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:description" content="A new Super Bowl ad is raising questions about the power of doorbell cameras."><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:image" content="https:... - Parsed Content
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AdvertisementSKIP ADVERTISEMENTSupported bySKIP ADVERTISEMENTWhat Homeowners Need to Know About Smart Home CamerasA new Super Bowl ad is raising questions about the power of doorbell cameras.Listen to this article Β· 6:41 min Learn moreShare full articleCredit...Smith Collection/Gado/Getty ImagesBy Dorie ChevlenFeb. 11, 2026On Sunday, a Super Bowl ad promoting a new A.I.-powered βSearch Partyβ feature for Amazonβs Ring camera, which activates all the cameras in a neighborhood to find lost dogs, was met with condemnation from Democratic politicians, right wing talking heads and thousands of social media users. The criticism came weeks after Ring announced a partnership with Flock Safety, a company that sells license-plate scanning devices and software, raising concerns that it could soon be used by ICE agents.And yesterday, authorities released Google Nest video taken the night of Nancy Guthrieβs abduction from her home showing a masked man at her front door. It is not clear yet why the...
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Claims from this Source (26)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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Simplified: A Super Bowl ad raises questions about doorbell cameras
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Simplified: Search Party uses AI to search for lost dogs based on uploaded pictures
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Security π a1164248-2a6a-41d6-8fc4-a12412c28597Simplified: Social media users called on customers to dump Ring's products last month
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Investigation π a1165d3b-7927-48ca-9d3e-b1d583ed8819Simplified: Doorbell camera footage of a masked man at Nancy Guthrie's front door was made public on Tuesday 10 days after her family last saw her
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d4b-da12-4f00-a234-6c4922ef9620Simplified: Police have not said whether footage turned up new evidence
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Security π a1166502-a142-442d-9af8-632760629873Simplified: Some cameras store video locally which is better for data security but creates limits
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166502-e47a-4231-9331-05c07bc837daSimplified: Security camera makers may be compelled by law to share some recordings
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166503-2e58-424e-9c60-53876f322427Simplified: In some cases this has included not just outdoor camera footage but indoor as well
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166503-557f-4fde-b0a4-b0fb5ee52eeeSimplified: Companies can share videos at the request of law enforcement if a situation is deemed an emergency
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166503-7b19-44e4-af53-0fa74b47c931Simplified: Amazon Ring and Google Nest may not disclose having shared user videos with authorities because of legal restrictions
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Simplified: The deviceβs user can notify the petβs owner or decline
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Simplified: Scores of posters online have decried Ringβs new feature as dystopian and terrifying
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In a rare unifying moment, members of the political right and left expressed their discontent.0.950Simplified: Members of the political right and left expressed their discontent
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The company has clarified its employees βare not able to view, access, or control live streams.β0.950Simplified: The company clarified its employees are not able to view access or control live streams
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166504-8e5e-4504-ada3-842619aaa9c9Simplified: Amazon releases a report on Ringβs law enforcement information requests every six months
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166504-ae7e-416b-acb1-404a566b6edbSimplified: In the most recent report Ring received 2276 search-warrant information requests 303 subpoenas 33 court orders and 3013 information-preservation reque...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166504-e677-465d-8a17-31cf82b2ad97Simplified: Only 653 Ring camera users were notified
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Security π a1164247-cbfe-4948-bd57-8fde7c793e11Simplified: Ring inked partnerships with Flock Safety and Axon Enterprises in October 2025
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Security π a1164247-e6a7-41b8-abe6-f4050442ff4cSimplified: Ring users can share footage with police departments using Flock or Axon software
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Legal π a1166505-553a-4404-b201-ea71860b2499Simplified: Google now folds that data into its general report for all Google products
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Simplified: Historical footage would probably be stored only on a server somewhere in one of Google's vast data centers
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Simplified: Enable end-to-end encryption restricts viewing only to the owner of the video on a specifically authorized device to prevent that
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Simplified: Forfeit features of the device often when enabling end-to-end encryption on Ring this includes shared user access to video A.I. video search 24/7 reco...