The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wacky indoor Amazon drone takes on privacy skeptics

- By Rob Lever

WASHINGTON: It could be the wackiest product yet from Amazon — a tiny indoor drone which buzzes around people’s homes as a security sentry.

The introducti­on of the Ring Always Home Cam planned for 2021 has opened up fresh debate on the potential for intrusive surveillan­ce and privacy infringeme­nt.

Amazon says the tiny drone is “built with privacy in mind” and operates at the direction of its customers. Nestled in a charging dock, the drone can be deployed remotely and send up to five minutes of video to the user.

But some activists express concerns about the device — part of a family of Ring-branded home security technology which has been scrutinize­d over its links to law enforcemen­t.

John Verdi, vice president of policy at the Future of Privacy Forum, a Washington think tank, said the deployment may contribute to a “normalizat­ion of surveillan­ce” in everyday life as more consumers install devices that listen and see inside the home.

“When cameras and microphone­s and other sensors are deployed in private spaces like living rooms and bedrooms, that leads to an acceptance of everyday surveillan­ce,” Verdi

When cameras and microphone­s and other sensors are deployed in private spaces like living rooms and bedrooms, that leads to an acceptance of everyday surveillan­ce.

— John Verdi, vice president of policy at the Future of Privacy Foohn Verdi, vice president of policy at the Future of Privacy Forumrum

said.

Nonetheles­s, Verdi noted that “Amazon has put some thought into privacy protection­s for this product both in the hardware and in the software policies.”

University of Washington law professor and privacy researcher Ryan Calo noted that even the perception of being watched can make people change behavior.

With any form of electronic monitoring, “you feel like there is a social agent in your midst,” Calo said.

“A camera like this can make people feel observed and threatens one of the few remaining opportunit­ies for solitude.”

Calo said the flying cam “could be incrementa­lly more harmful than a regular camera” by allowing someone to monitor other people without their consent.

Although it is marketed as a home device, Calo said it could be used in a workplace as well and “allows the person who controls it to check in on anyone — and there isn’t anywhere to hide.”

This could enable an abusive spouse to monitor a partner, for example.

British-based privacy group Big Brother Watch was more blunt, calling the cam “arguably Amazon’s most chilling surveillan­ce product yet.” Feeling safe or threatened? An Amazon spokespers­on said of the new device: “Our customers are looking for ways to keep their homes and families safe, connected, and secure — and our new products and features, including the Always Home Cam, help do just that.”

Amazon, which purchased Ring in 2018, has faced a wave of criticism over its sharing of surveillan­ce footage from its doorbell camera and partnershi­ps with police department­s which have encouraged homeowners to use the devices.

But Amazon said Ring indoor cameras are not subject to law enforcemen­t requests and have no microphone to record audio.

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