It seems like all I have been writing about lately, is how police are using cam-share programs to create city-wide surveillance networks.
When I first heard about ‘Ring’ a smart doorbell with a video camera, I didn’t think much of it.
I mean how could the police state turn what appeared to be an innocuous smart device into another surveillance tool?
Enter Amazon, who recently purchased Ring for $1 billion dollars.
Fast forward a few months and Amazon announces that Ring is on a mission to work with law enforcement across the country.
For the first time in awhile I have to admit I did not see this one coming.
Police departments across the country are creating spying doorbell networks or as they call them ‘Neighbors’ a digital neighborhood watch program.
Amazon created a ‘Neighbors’ app that allows homeowners to send videos of suspicious people to the police and neighbors.
An article in Motherboard warns, “the app, while presented as a crime-fighting aid, could also be a new place for paranoid people to profile fellow citizens, as similar platforms in the past”.
Nosy neighbors send videos of suspicious people to the police in real-time.
Just like New Jersey’s “Citizen Virtual Patrol” program, Amazon’s spying doorbells are turning neighbors into stay-at-home spies!
Think about that the next time you have a BBQ party or invite friends over. (To find out more about virtual block watch programs click here.)
Because nothing says ‘NEIGHBOR’ quite like a spying doorbell.
Soon police departments across the country will begin encouraging neighbors to install Ring’s spying doorbells.
A Ring spokesperson told Motherboard, “Over the next days and weeks, law enforcement across the U.S. will be joining Neighbors.”
Police chief accidentally admits neighborhood watch’s are an extension of the police state.
If you have been reading my recent stories about smarty city projects, digital neighborhood watch’s and police cam-share programs, one thing has become crystal clear.
DHS is using them to expand its ‘see something, say something’ way of thinking by creating city-wide surveillance networks. (To find out more about police cam-share programs click here & here.)
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