Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

Ring’s Indoor Cam is an easy add-on to a Ring video doorbell

After years of making video doorbells and outdoor home security cameras, Ring has finally released a purpose-built camera for inside the walls of your home. The $59.99 Indoor Cam has many of the same features as Ring’s outdoor cameras, such as motion detection, two-way audio, and 1080p recording, but it’s smaller and less expensive. If you’re already a Ring customer, it’s an easy addition to your setup if you’re looking for a camera for inside your home that will integrate with the same app and cloud services you’re already using. But if you’re not already a Ring customer, there are even less expensive options that work just as well for an indoor security camera.

The Indoor Cam’s design is similar to Ring’s Stick Up Cam, just smaller. The Indoor Cam doesn’t have the Stick Up Cam’s battery or weather sealing; it has to be plugged into an outlet to function, and it isn’t designed to be used outdoors at all. As a result, it takes up much less space on a shelf or mounted on a wall. The included base can be positioned on the bottom or the back of the camera providing the same amount of mounting options as Ring’s other cameras.

Good Stuff

  • Small, compact design
  • Easy setup and management via Ring app
  • 1080p video and night vision

Bad Stuff

  • No battery means you have to run power to it
  • No archive of clips without paying for cloud storage
  • Even less expensive options are available if you don’t already have a Ring system

Like the Stick Up Cam, the Indoor Cam can record 1080p video clips with audio, it has infrared sensors for low-light video, and it has adjustable motion detection zones. It supports two-way audio so you can speak to someone facing the camera through the Ring app on your phone, and the lens as a wide, 140-degree field of view. The night mode has both traditional black and white and color options.

The Indoor Cam can be accessed through the Ring app at any time for a live feed, but it will also record clips when it detects a motion event. This can be configured with adjustable sensitivity and range or disabled entirely. Similarly, the audio recording can be disabled.

Using the Indoor Cam is much like using any other indoor home security camera: you plug it in, set it up on your Wi-Fi network through the Ring app, and then access the video clips and live stream from your phone. Out of the box, the Indoor Cam will only offer live-streaming. To access recorded clips, you’ll need to pay for a Ring Protect plan, which starts at $3 per month and provides a rolling 60-day archive of recorded clips. If you’re already paying for Ring’s Protect Plus plan at $10 per month for other Ring cameras, you can add as many Indoor Cams to it as you like for no additional monthly charge.

Every smart device now requires you to agree to a series of terms and conditions before you can use it — contracts that no one actually reads. It’s impossible for us to read and analyze every single one of these agreements. But we’re going to start counting exactly how many times you have to hit “agree” to use devices when we review them since these are agreements most people don’t read and definitely can’t negotiate.

In order to set up and use the Ring Indoor Cam, you must create (or already have) a Ring account through the Ring app for Android or iOS. Creating an account involves agreeing to Ring’s terms of service and privacy policy. It is not possible to use a Ring product without first agreeing to these things.

If you add an integration to the Ring camera, such as Amazon’s Alexa assistant, you will also need to create an account with that integration and agree to its terms of service separately.

Final tally: two mandatory agreements and however many optional agreements depending on what other services are linked to your Ring account.

Video quality is on par with other indoor cameras, which means it’s perfectly fine for seeing what’s going on inside your home when you’re not there. The ability to have night clips in color is nice, but it’s not a totally necessary function, and you can disable it if you find it isn’t working well. The two-way audio works like other security cameras, too: it’s kind of squawky and doesn’t sound particularly great, but voices are clear and audible. I don’t think Ring will be adding the ability to use the Indoor Cam as an Alexa speaker (despite being owned by Amazon) due to the speaker’s limitations, however.

If you already have a Ring video doorbell and perhaps other Ring cameras outside of your home, the Indoor Cam is an easy and cheap way to add monitoring to the interior of your home, and it will integrate with the cloud services you’re likely already paying for. But if you don’t already have a Ring system and are just looking for a simple Wi-Fi-connected camera to put inside your home, then other brands, such as Wyze, offer many of the same features for less than half of the Indoor Cam’s price.

Photography by Dan Seifert / The Verge

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, Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

How to watch your Nest camera's video history on a computer

If you are a Nest Aware subscriber, your camera’s video history  will be stored automatically in the cloud. 

You can watch your camera’s video history on your phone or tablet with the Nest app, or you can use a computer.

To watch the video history on a computer, sign in to your account at home.nest.com. Then select a camera that has a Nest Aware subscription. 

While watching your video history on a computer, you’ll see a timeline at the bottom of the screen. The timeline helps you quickly scan through all of your recorded video so you can find and watch all the important things that have happened. 

Your timeline serves two major purposes:

  • It shows you at a glance when an event happened in your video history. Motion or sound are examples of the kinds of events your camera takes notice of.
  • It lets you quickly go back and forward through your recorded video history so that you can jump straight to the action and see what happened.

Here’s what the timeline looks like:

To watch different parts of your video history, simply click on the part of the timeline that you’d like to watch from. Your video will immediately jump backward or forward and start playing from the point you clicked.

Let's take a look at the timeline’s different parts: the numbers in the image above match the numbered text below.

1. Calendar

Click on the Calendar icon to watch video from a specific day. Depending on your Nest Aware subscription, you can go back a certain number of days in your video history. For example, if you have a 10-day video history subscription, you’ll see history for the last 10 days on a rolling basis. If you don’t want to lose certain memories, you can save clips.

2. Time buttons

Use the HR (hour), MIN (minute), and SEC (second) options to control the scale of the timeline. This changes how much time is currently shown across the timeline. MIN is the default view. If you want to see a shorter period of time in greater detail, including the exact start and stop times of motion or sound events, click on SEC. Or to see a wider overview of your timeline, click on HR.
Note: When viewing your timeline in HR or MIN modes, events that happen close together may be close enough to look like a single event.

3. Left and right timeline arrows

The arrows to the left and right of the timeline help you navigate back and forward through your video history.

What the dots and bars mean on your timeline

  • Gray dots or bars on your timeline means that your camera detected motion or sound outside of your camera’s Activity Zones.
  • Colored dots or bars on your timeline usually mean your camera detected motion in one of your Activity Zones. The color matches the color given to the Activity Zone when it was created. So if you created an orange Activity Zone around the front door, all orange dots and bars on your timeline mean that your camera detected activity in that zone.
  • Multiple colored dots inside of a gray line mean that motion was detected inside of two zones while that activity was taking place.
  • Dark parts on your timeline
    • If you have an EBR subscription, you’ll see dark gray gaps in your camera’s Sightline between events. This is normal.
    • If you have a Nest Aware Plus subscription, after 10 days you’ll see gaps in your camera’s Sightline. This is because the app will remove video that contains no activity, so you’ll only see video clips of activity.
    • If you have a 1st gen Nest Aware subscription, you’ll only see gaps in your camera’s Sightline if your camera was turned off or was offline.
  • The white line shows the part of the timeline you’re currently watching.

5. Creating or viewing clips and timelapses

How to jump to an event

Hover your mouse over an event without clicking. A small preview window will appear, showing you what was happening during the event. Click on an event to jump straight to it and see what happened or click the New Clip icon to create a clip of the event.
You can also drag the timeline left and right to quickly fast forward and rewind. While dragging, snapshots appear above the timeline, so you can see what’s happening. When you release, the video will play at normal speed.

Player controls

Move your mouse over your video to reveal the playback controls.

The rewind button will rewind your video by 30 seconds.

The pause/play button will pause and resume your video.

The fast-forward button will skip your video ahead from its current point by 30 seconds.

It’s grayed out if you’re already watching live video.

The live button will immediately bring you back to live video.

It’s grayed out if you’re already watching live video.

While you’re watching your video history, the LIVE icon in the upper corner is greyed out.

You can click the LIVE icon to jump to the present. When you do, the icon turns blue to let you know you’re watching live video.

Источник: [https://torrent-igruha.org/3551-portal.html]
Ring Doorbell video stream Archives

Amazon's doorbell camera Ring is working with police – and controlling what they say

Ring, Amazon’s camera-connected smart doorbell company, has cameras watching hundreds of thousands of doorsteps across the US. It’s also keeping an eye on what local police say online.

Records obtained through an information request show how Ring uses corporate partnerships to shape the communications of police departments it collaborates with, directing the departments’ press releases, social media posts and comments on public posts.

Ring, which was acquired by Amazon in 2018, sells smart doorbells that allow users to monitor their doorstep remotely and operates Neighbors by Ring, an accompanying app that lets users view footage uploaded by other Ring owners.

'Recipe for disaster': Amazon under fire for selling face-recognition software to police

In recent months, Ring has partnered with hundreds of US law enforcement agencies, offering departments access to its platform in exchange for outreach to residents. Ring says the program gives police more resources to solve crimes, while critics fear the company is quietly building up a for-profit private surveillance network. Ring’s power over police departments’ communications with the citizens they serve is just the latest question about the company’s operations.

Andrew Ferguson, a law professor and the author of The Rise of Big Data Policing said there has been a rise of tech company influence on police work over the past decade, but shaping marketing language within police departments represents a new level of “distortion of public safety rule”.

“Police should not have dual loyalty to a private company and the public – their loyalty should be to the public,” he said. “Any sort of blurring of that line causes us to question that loyalty.”

How Amazon controls social media of local police departments

Pittsburg, Kansas, a city near the Missouri border with a population of 20,000 people, publicly announced a partnership with Ring on 22 April 2019. Emails obtained by the Guardian show Ring first pitched the department in December 2018, offering deals including discounts on devices and sending the police force a free $200 device for every 20 downloads of the Neighbors app. These types of tit-for-tat agreements were a common practice for the company, reporting from Motherboard has showed, and are part of an effort to grow the audience of its app.

On 28 February, once the Pittsburg police green-lighted the program, Ring sent the department a press release template and noted the final communique would have to be approved by Ring before release. The Ring representative also sent Amazon-approved social media assets to be used to promote the Ring program.

“Remember to make sure you highlight your Branch/Text link to try and have your civilians download the Neighbors by Ring App,” he said on 12 March. “I recommend reposting these links to your social media pages once a month to re-engage the community to download the app!”

On 25 April, a spokesman from Ring praised social media posts regarding the partnership and encouraged more. “Let’s keep this community interaction going strong!” he said. “Hopefully, the department can get a ton of people to download the Neighbors App from your specific link!”

Emails between Ring and police officials in Gwinnett county, Georgia – a county near Atlanta with a population of around 900,000 – show a similar script.

Ring first contacted the department in August 2018, and police approved the partnership in May 2019. Ring donated 80 doorbells to police, valued at $15,920. It heavily edited the press release about the program, removing one sentence that said “the company will donate 80 Ring Video Doorbell 2s, valued at $15,920, which the company will give away and help install”.

Ring also changed wording from the police department that said the department “will be able to access videos submitted by subscribers of Ring” to say the department will “join existing crime and safety conversations with local residents”. Ring also deleted a sentence saying “police cannot access live stream video”, changing it to “police will not have access to cameras, live footage, or user data”.

The Ring representative also offered to cross-promote alerts from Gwinnett county police directly to the Amazon-owned Facebook page, sharing images of people who had not yet been charged with a crime publicly. A spokesman from the Gwinnett county police department said separate from Ring, it often publishes images and videos of suspects in crimes on social media to help identify them for criminal prosecution.

Gizmodo documented similar arrangements between the company and police departments in California, Florida and Texas.

“Ring provides sample social media content for police departments to utilize at their discretion to inform their jurisdictions about their partnerships with Ring,” a spokeswoman for the company said.Ring requests to look at press releases and any messaging prior to distribution to ensure our company and our products and services are accurately represented,” she added.

Amazon’s social media advising is ongoing

Emails between Ring representatives and Pittsburg police show the company continued to shape police rhetoric online, months after the launch of the partnership. In one email the representative encourages officers to tell locals more about crime statistics.

“I just wanted to reach out and say great job with the response you made with neighbors commenting about crime going up etc,” the email says. “That’s an exact comment residents need to see coming directly from the department to put things into perspective.”

In another post, a Ring spokesman tells police to comment more frequently on crime posts to encourage users to report on the Neighbors app when they see crime in the neighborhood. “This is exactly the interaction your community needs to see,” he told an officer who commented on a post about a woman whose car had been broken into.

A spokesman for the Pittsburg police said Ring and its Neighbors app represent an extension of its information dissemination and crime reporting efforts in the general community.

“We recognize that social media is a vast and readily accessible public communications mechanism and are trying to openly engage the community through as many platforms as possible to encourage people to become involved and report crime or suspicious activity,” a spokesman said. “Ring is another social media platform through which we can communicate and share information with the community and to promote better transparency.”

Andrew Ferguson, the law professor, said the language Ring encourages police departments to market Ring products to private citizens, changing the relationship between citizens and the police.

“The purpose for this kind of commentary is to fuel a narrative that these devices are effective in stopping crime, that there is a high rate of crime and thus people need these devices, and police support a particular brand of camera over other brands of camera,” he said. “All of those are questionable choices for a public safety organization that should have a primary purpose of serving public safety and not corporate marketing.”

These kinds of interactions “undermine public trust in law enforcement”, echoed Matt Cagle, a technology and civil liberties attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union said.

“It is shocking to see a private corporation dictating what public officials will say to community members about public safety issues,” he said. “Ring answers to Amazon shareholders, and police are supposed to answer to the public. That is the core tension in these relationships.”

Privacy advocates want police surveillance off our doorsteps

Ring had a 97% share of the video doorbell market as of 2018, according to market research firm NPD group. The company had more than one million US customers when it was acquired by Amazon in 2018. A map of existing users in Gwinnett county shared by the company with the police force showed hundreds of cameras in the new area of partnership.

The company has now created partnerships with more than 400 police forces, according to the Washington Post, including partnerships with law enforcement agencies across the US in places including Florida, Virginia, Atlanta, California, and Texas.

Ring said police do not automatically have access to Ring video streams. Law enforcement has access to a portal, and then needs to directly request information from Neighbors app users if it wants to watch footage. Ring says it does not share information with law enforcement unless a user consents.

But the company’s law enforcement partnerships have faced criticism from privacy and criminal justice activists. Advocates fear that the cameras will allow police access to surveillance footage while bypassing the public process to approve more traditional security cameras. They have pointed out that contracts between police and Ring often face little public scrutiny and experts have raised concerns over requests from Ring to get access to police department’s computer-aided dispatch feeds.

Advocates have also questioned how comfortable users feel in denying law enforcement requests. And they have pointed at problems of discrimination that Ring, and the broader industry of neighborhood social networks, have faced.

“What often happens in instances of increased surveillance is that there are more arrests of ‘suspicious characters,’ which often end up being people of color not breaking any laws,” said Caroline Sinders, a machine learning designer in Berlin who studies the intersections between technology and harassment. “This is going to result in more people of color being hassled and arrested for just existing.”

Jamie Siminoff, the founder of Ring has said Ring keeps “customers, their privacy, and the security of their information” at the top of its priority list. “Our customers and Neighbors app users place their trust in us to help protect their homes and communities and we take that responsibility incredibly seriously,” he said in a blogpost about Neighbors.

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