Dozens sue Amazon's Ring after camera hack leads to threats and racial slurs

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Dozens sue Amazon's Ring after camera hack leads to threats and racial slurs

Dozens sue Amazon's Ring after camera hack leads to threats and racial slurs
Class action claims weak security allowed hackers to take over the smart cameras used on doorbells and in homes

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A Ring doorbell camera. A suit against the company contains examples of hackers threatening sexual assault and threatening murder. Photograph: Jessica Hill/AP
Kari Paul in San Francisco
Wed 23 Dec 2020 21.40 GMT
Last modified on Mon 28 Dec 2020 18.37 GMT

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Dozens of people who say they were subjected to death threats, racial slurs, and blackmail after their in-home Ring smart cameras were hacked are suing the company over “horrific” invasions of privacy.

A new class action lawsuit, which combines a number of cases filed in recent years, alleges that lax security measures at Ring, which is owned by Amazon, allowed hackers to take over their devices. Ring provides home security in the form of smart cameras that are often installed on doorbells or inside people’s homes.

The suit against Ring builds on previous cases, joining together complaints filed by more than 30 people in 15 families who say their devices were hacked and used to harass them. In response to these attacks, Ring “blamed the victims, and offered inadequate responses and spurious explanations”, the suit alleges. The plaintiffs also claim the company has also failed to adequately update its security measures in the aftermath of such hacks.

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A plaintiff was watching TV with his teenage son when a voice through the camera allegedly asked them what they were watching. Photograph: Plaintiffs' complaint
People who could benefit from the lawsuit include the families named in the case, as well as any other Ring users who have been hacked. The class also covers the tens of thousands of customers who purchased a Ring doorbell between 2015 and 2019, even if they were not hacked.

“I would imagine that there are a whole lot more people out there who have been hacked,” said Hassan Zavareei, the lead attorney on the case. “This is probably just the tip of the iceberg.”

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The suit outlines examples of hackers taking over Ring cameras, screaming obscenities, demanding ransoms, and threatening murder and sexual assault.

One Ring user says he was asked through his camera as he watched TV one night, “What are you watching?” Another alleges his children were addressed by an unknown hacker through the device, who commented on their basketball play and encouraged them to approach the camera.

In one case, an older woman at an assisted living facility was allegedly told “tonight you die” and sexually harassed through the camera. Due to the distress caused by the hack she ultimately had to move back in with her family, feeling unsafe in the facility where she once lived.

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A screengrab allegedly shows a hacker threatening an older woman whose family purchased a Ring device to keep an eye on her after she entered assisted living. Photograph: Plaintiffs' complaint
In another incident, a plaintiff who had purchased a Ring device to keep an eye on her four-year-old daughter with a history of seizures alleges that music from a horror film was played through her camera. Her complaint reads:

On December 4, 2019, shortly after 8 pm, while Ms LeMay was running errands, both of the Ring devices began live-streaming. Simultaneously, the Tiny Tim cover of “Tiptoe Through the Tulips”, a song that appeared in a scene from … the horror film “Insidious”, began to play through the two-way talk feature. Intrigued by the music, Ms LeMay’s eight-year-old daughter, AL, went to the room she shares with two of her younger sisters to investigate. But the room was empty. As AL wandered the room, looking for the source of the music, the song abruptly stopped, and a man’s voice rang out: “Hello there.”

LeMay immediately changed passwords and called Ring that day to report the hack, but she didn’t get a response for nearly a week. The company never told LeMay where the hack originated or how it occurred, the complaint alleges. The plaintiff eventually had to leave her job because of the emotional distress, the complaint said.

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A hacker allegedly got into a Ring camera and told an eight-year-old girl he was Santa Claus and asked if she wanted to be his ‘best friend’. Photograph: Plaintiffs' complaint
Ring has not said who is behind the hacks, and victims say they still do not know who accessed their homes through the devices.

Repeatedly, Ring blamed victims for not using sufficiently strong passwords, the suit claims. It says Ring should have required users to establish complicated passwords when setting up the devices and implement two-factor authentication, which adds a second layer of security using a second form of identification, such as a phone number.

However, as the lawsuit alleges, Ring was hacked in 2019 – meaning the stolen credentials from that breach may have been used to get into users’ cameras. That means the hacks that Ring has allegedly blamed on customers may have been caused by Ring itself. A spokesperson said the company did not comment on ongoing litigation.


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The lawsuit also cites research from the Electronic Frontier Foundation and others that Ring violates user privacy by using a number of third-party trackers on its app.

The suit said that, at present, Ring “has not sufficiently improved its security practices or responded adequately to the ongoing threats its products pose to its customers”. Security and privacy experts have also criticized Ring’s response.

“After a slew of terrifying headlines about their poor security practices, Ring has finally made some improvements,” said Evan Greer, the deputy director of the privacy advocacy group Fight for the Future. “But implementing basic security that they should have had in the first place does nothing to change the fact that Ring cameras make communities less safe, not more safe.”

In addition to hacking concerns, Ring has faced increasing criticism for its growing surveillance partnership with police forces. Ring has now created law enforcement partnerships, which allow users to send footage and photos to police, in more than 1,300 cities.

“Ring’s surveillance-based business model is fundamentally incompatible with civil rights and democracy,” Greer said. “These devices, and the thinking behind them, should be melted down and never spoken of again.”

 

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:dahell: but the article says it is because of Rings poor security practises and a hack back in 2019

but people using shytty passwords and no 2FA is just as culpable. Majority of the time, the people hacked are the ones that use the same password across multiple accounts and that password was involved in stolen account info.

Efit: @J Money: I was a dumbass and had this happen couple years ago as I used the same password across several accounts. Had folks buying pizzas all over the country on my Domino’s account and lost all my damn rewards:mjlol:
 
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Ethnic Vagina Finder

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Most People just buy and put em up, no clue how to secure ports, make strong passwords, etc. What did y'all expect its an internet based device.
Nothing is secure on the internet.

It’s still Amazons fault. For one their network is not secured. For two, they should educate guests or force them to better secure their devices. For example, when WiFi first became popular, the devices came and didnt ask you to create a password so your neighbors could use your internet. Eventually, they switched it up and it became standard for the software to ask you to create a password during the install.


At the end of the day, if you’re selling a security device, you might want to make sure that it’s actually secure, otherwise it defeats the whole purpose.
 

xXMASHERXx

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Have an internet connected camera in your home, brehs.
This is the main problem right here and not just with cameras. People need to understand that these companies are not taking security seriously on these internet facing devices so when you connect one to your home, you are setting yourself up. If you have to have these devices on your network, isolate them from the rest of your network and only allow the connections that are necessary for it to function.
 

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only camera i have in my house is pointed outside
i'd never put any inside
i got a friend who puts his inside so he can watch his dog while he's away from home. Can actually give them commands and stuff too.
"hey! get off the couch! put down the shoe." type shyt. Seems quite handy for him. but other than that i don't see any reason to have them inside. you not a supermarket. don't need to catch shoplifters in the act, you can just assume any trespassers are stealing.
 
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