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| Amazon’s Ring camera system is integrated into U.S. law-enforcement evidence workflows. Police and other agencies can request video footage directly from Ring users, enabling private home surveillance footage to be shared with law enforcement.<ref>[https://support.ring.com/hc/en-us/articles/360061697652-How-Public-Safety-Agencies-Request-and-Receive-Video-from-Ring-Neighbors How public safety agencies request video from Ring]</ref> | | Amazon’s Ring cameras are integrated into U.S. law-enforcement workflows. Police agencies can request footage directly from Ring users, allowing private home surveillance video to be shared with law enforcement. |
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| In 2025, Ring announced a partnership with Flock Safety, further linking consumer home cameras to law-enforcement surveillance platforms used nationwide.<ref>[https://www.flocksafety.com/blog/flock-safety-and-ring-partner-to-help-neighborhoods-work-together-for-safer-communities Flock Safety and Ring partnership announcement]</ref> | | In 2025, Ring partnered with Flock Safety, further linking consumer cameras to nationwide law-enforcement surveillance platforms. |
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| Civil-liberties organisations warn that these systems significantly expand surveillance capacity with limited transparency or public oversight.<ref>[https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2023/03/what-you-should-know-about-flock-safety-and-license-plate-readers EFF: What you should know about Flock Safety]</ref> | | Civil-liberties groups warn this expands surveillance with limited transparency or oversight. ICE List strongly recommends against purchasing or using Ring cameras. |
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| '''ICE List strongly recommends against purchasing or using Ring cameras.'''
| | [[Ring Cameras and Law Enforcement Access|Read full documentation →]] |
| For full documentation, see: [[Ring Cameras and Law Enforcement Access]].
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