Ring agrees to pay $5.6 million after cameras were used to spy on customers


Amazon’s Ring has settled with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over charges that the company allowed employees and contractors to access customers’ private videos, and failed to implement security protections which enabled hackers to take control of customers’ accounts, cameras, and videos.

The FTC is now sending refunds totaling more than $5.6 million to US consumers as a result of the settlement. Ring LLC, which was purchased by Amazon in February 2018, sells internet-connected, home security cameras and video doorbells.

Read more…
Source: Malwarebytes Labs


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • Over two million users hit by top US pharmacy provider data breach

    November 15, 2023

    Truepill, formerly known as Postmeds, suffered a data breach that resulted in sensitive data on more than 2.3 million patients being stolen. The US Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights breach portal listed Truepill (or rather Postmeds) as being under investigation for a data breach that affected a total of 2,364,359 people. Read ...

  • Bitcoin ATM operator Coin Cloud suffers severe data breach

    November 13, 2023

    Coin Cloud, a prominent Bitcoin ATM operator, has fallen victim to a significant security breach in a recent development that has shaken the cryptocurrency world. Hackers, whose identities remain unknown, have reportedly seized control of Coin Cloud’s backend system source code and accessed sensitive customer data, including 70,000 client selfies and personal details of around 300,000 ...

  • Data breach of Michigan healthcare giant exposes millions of records

    November 13, 2023

    Michigan-based healthcare nonprofit McLaren Health Care notified more than 2 million people about a data breach exposing personal information on Thursday, according to a data breach notification report. Unauthorized access to McLaren systems began on July 28 and lasted through August, but the individual impact varies from person to person. According to a notice on ...

  • YouTube shows ads for ad blocker, financial scams

    November 10, 2023

    After performing local experiments for a few months, YouTube recently expanded its effort to block ad blockers. The move was immediately unpopular with some users, and raised some questions in Europe about whether it was breaking privacy laws. In addition, there are some still some fundamental issues that have some people concerned. In this blog post, ...

  • Maine government says data breach affects 1.3 million people

    November 10, 2023

    The government of Maine has confirmed over a million individuals had personal information stolen in a data breach earlier this year by a Russia-linked ransomware gang. In a statement published Thursday, the Maine government said hackers exploited a vulnerability in its MOVEit file-transfer system, which stored sensitive data on state residents. The hackers used the vulnerability ...

  • Optus loses court bid to keep report into cause of cyber-attack secret

    November 10, 2023

    Optus has lost a bid in the federal court to keep secret a report on the cause of the 2022 cyber-attack – which resulted in the personal information of about 10 million customers being exposed – after a judge rejected the telco’s legal privilege claim. After the hack, the company announced in October last year that ...