Cities and local police departments asked Ring โ Amazonโs home security company โ to share with them the personal information of every citizen who bought a Ring surveillance camera through a tax-funded subsidy program.
Amazon is running a discount program in which cities subsidize the purchases of Ring smart doorbells with taxpayer money. Ring will match every dollar a city allocates for the discounts of these devices. For example, out of a $100 subsidy, $50 would come from tax money and $50 would be paid by Amazon. Ring also gives cities discount codes that can be used by residents to buy subsidized devices online.
Motherboard revealed that city officials from Arcadia and Rancho Palos Verdes CA had been able to obtain a database containing information about everyone who owns a Ring doorbell in the neighborhood, simply by asking.
Rancho Palos Verdesโ City Council โ who had paid $100,000 in 2017 for a discount program โ claims that Ring told the city that it could provide a list with a โfull breakdown of every resident and address that purchased a deviceโ as a part of the discount program.
In Arcadia, a document from its police department โ which spent money on Ringโs discounts in 2017 and 2018 โ reads that Ring would provide the city with and โaddress reportโ of the products purchased, in order to help Arcadiaโs PD pinpoint the location of Ringโs smart doorbells and other security cameras, and โassess [their] level of community interest.โ
An email exchange between the city government and a company employee shows that Ring had a detailed list of names and email addresses of people who bought a subsidized camera. According to Ring, the information was shared to help the city block people from using a discount code twice.
โWe have names of all the people who purchased if you want to block these people,โ said Ringโs employee. โWe will match against names and emails of everyone who purchased at the event and prevent people from doubling up.โ
In an emailed statement to Motherboard, Ring denied that the company has ever shared such kind of information about its customers with the city governments participating in subsidized programs. The company also pointed out that the city officials misinterpreted the communication:
โRing does not provide, and has never provided, resident information to law enforcement or cities participating in Ringโs subsidy match program,โ the company said. โThe statements made by Arcadiaโs representatives in presenting the subsidy program were a misrepresentation of what was contained in the agreement itself and no such information was provided to the City or Police of Arcadia at any point.โ