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Amazon Ring to pay $5.8 mn over unlawfully accessing consumer videos
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IANS | 01 Jun, 2023
Ring, the Amazon-owned maker of video surveillance devices, will pay
$5.8 million in consumer refunds and will be prohibited from profiting
from unlawfully accessing consumer videos, the US Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) has announced.
The FTC charged home
security camera company Ring with compromising its customers' privacy by
allowing any employee or contractor to access consumers' private videos
and by failing to implement basic privacy and security protections,
enabling hackers to take control of consumers' accounts, cameras, and
videos.
Under a proposed order, which must be approved by a
federal court, Ring will be required to delete data products such as
data, models, and algorithms derived from videos it unlawfully reviewed.
It
also will be required to implement a privacy and security program with
novel safeguards on human review of videos as well as other stringent
security controls, such as multi-factor authentication for both employee
and customer accounts, the US agency said in a statement late on
Wednesday.
"Ring's disregard for privacy and security exposed
consumers to spying and harassment," said Samuel Levine, Director of the
FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection. "The FTC's order makes clear that
putting profit over privacy doesn't pay."
California-based Ring,
which was purchased by Amazon in February 2018, sells
internet-connected, video-enabled home security cameras, doorbells, and
related accessories and services.
In a complaint, the FTC said
that Ring deceived its customers by failing to restrict employees' and
contractors' access to its customers' videos, using customer videos to
train algorithms, among other purposes, without consent, and failing to
implement security safeguards.
The FTC also said Ring failed to
take any steps until January 2018 to adequately notify customers or
obtain their consent for extensive human review of customers' private
video recordings for various purposes, including training algorithms.
Despite
experiencing multiple credential-stuffing attacks in 2017 and 2018,
Ring failed to implement common tactics such as multi-factor
authentication until 2019.
As a result, hackers continued to
exploit account vulnerabilities to access stored videos, live video
streams, and account profiles of approximately 55,000 customers,
according to the complaint.
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