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:

  • Shangri-La hotel chain confirms data leak

    October 5, 2022

    Hotel chain Shangri-La Group has admitted to its systems being attacked, and personal data describing guests accessed by unknown parties, over a timeframe that includes the dates on which a high-level international defence conference was staged at one of its Singapore properties. “Shangri-La Group recently discovered unauthorized activities on our IT network,” states a notice from ...

  • Optus confirms 2.1 million ID numbers exposed in data breach

    October 4, 2022

    Optus confirmed yesterday that 2.1 million customers had government identification numbers compromised during a cyberattack last month. In a press statement released yesterday, the mobile carrier updated the information regarding the personal data of 9.8 million customers exposed during the attack. In an investigation, Optus confirmed that a total of 2.1 million customers had valid or expired ...

  • How Ransomware Is Causing Chaos in American Schools

    October 3, 2022

    May 19, 2021 was supposed to be just another day at the end of the school year at Sierra College, a community college in Rocklin, California. Instead, hackers hit the school with ransomware, throwing it into chaos. “We are experiencing a major cybersecurity event this morning that is impacting the majority of services at Sierra College,” ...

  • Ransomware gang leaks data stolen from LAUSD school system

    October 3, 2022

    Thousands of files apparently stolen last month in a ransomware attack on the Los Angeles Unified School District were released on the dark web over the weekend. The threat has been a major concern for the nation’s second-largest school district since Labor Day Weekend, when a cyber intrusion forced school district officials to take the extraordinary ...

  • Russian retail chain ‘DNS’ confirms hack after data leaked online

    October 3, 2022

    Russian retail chain ‘DNS’ (Digital Network System) disclosed yesterday that they suffered a data breach that exposed the personal information of customers and employees. DNS is Russia’s second-largest computer and home appliance store chain, with 2,000 branches and 35,000 employees. According to the scant details provided in the announcement, a group of hackers residing outside the Russian ...

  • From today, America and UK follow new rules on how they can demand your data from each other

    October 3, 2022

    The Data Access Agreement (DAA), by which the US and UK have agreed how one country can respond to lawful data demands from police and investigators in the other, took effect on Monday. The DAA (aka the Access to Electronic Data for the Purpose of Countering Serious Crime) is intended to facilitate cross-border law enforcement within ...