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:

  • UK Tax Agency Collects 5.1M Biometric Voice IDs, May Violate GDPR

    June 24, 2018

    Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) in the UK is under investigation by that country’s regulator over the collection of more than 5 million biometric voice IDs. The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) is investigating the tax agency’s practice, which may violate the recently implemented General Data Protection Regulation, following an official complaint from watchdog group Big ...

  • Axis Cameras Riddled With Vulnerabilities Enabling “Full Control”

    June 18, 2018

    A slew of vulnerabilities in Axis cameras could enable an attacker to access camera video streams, control the camera, add it to a botnet or render it useless. Researchers at VDOO, who disclosed the vulns on Monday, recommended that customers update immediately after finding that more than 400 Axis IP cameras are impacted. Axis deploys a ...

  • Cops Are Confident iPhone Hackers Have Found a Workaround to Apple’s New Security Feature

    June 14, 2018

    Apple confirmed to The New York Times Wednesday it was going to introduce a new security feature, first reported by Motherboard. USB Restricted Mode, as the new feature is called, essentially turns the iPhone’s lightning cable port into a charge-only interface if someone hasn’t unlocked the device with its passcode within the last hour, meaning phone forensic tools shouldn’t be able ...

  • Chinese Hackers Carried Out Country-Level Watering Hole Attack

    June 14, 2018

    Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered an espionage campaign that has targeted a national data center of an unnamed central Asian country in order to conduct watering hole attacks. The campaign is believed to be active covertly since fall 2017 but was spotted in March by security researchers from Kaspersky Labs, who have attributed these attacks to a ...

  • GnuPG Flaw in Encryption Tools Lets Attackers Spoof Anyone’s Signature

    June 14, 2018

    A security researcher has discovered a critical vulnerability in some of the world’s most popular and widely used email encryption clients that use OpenPGP standard and rely on GnuPG for encrypting and digitally signing messages. The disclosure comes almost a month after researchers revealed a series of flaws, dubbed eFail, in PGP and S/Mime encryption tools that ...

  • Yahoo fined £250,000 by UK watchdog over data breach

    June 13, 2018

    The UK Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has fined Yahoo £250,000 over a data breach which occurred in 2014. The data breach resulted in the theft of at least 500 million records. It is believed that names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, hashed passwords, and some “encrypted or unencrypted security questions and answers” were compromised. Yahoo has ...