After Ring privacy backlash, company abandons plans for police partnership

Published: (February 16, 2026 at 10:02 AM EST)
2 min read
Source: 9to5Mac

Source: 9to5Mac

After Ring privacy backlash, company abandons plans for police partnership | Ring doorbells shown next to a no entry sign

Amazon’s plan to turn Ring doorbells into a neighborhood‑wide surveillance system was roundly denounced as dystopian even when it was just searching for lost dogs.

The company appears to have learned from the privacy backlash, announcing that it has now abandoned plans for a partnership with police.

Amazon had originally announced a partnership with Flock Safety, a company specializing in automated license‑plate recognition and other forms of video surveillance. The deal would have allowed police to send requests for doorbell video footage to Ring owners.

The company claims that it has now abandoned this plan because it would require “more time and resources than anticipated.”

In October 2025, Ring and Flock Safety announced our intention to work together on an integration with Community Requests. Following a comprehensive review, we determined the planned Flock Safety integration would require significantly more time and resources than anticipated. As a result, we have made the joint decision to cancel the planned integration.

The more likely reality is that Ring abandoned the plan after the backlash it experienced when it ran a Super Bowl ad promoting the Ring Search Party feature to help find lost dogs. Against a backdrop of nationwide protests against ICE operations, viewers quickly pointed out that this laid the groundwork for the feature to be tweaked to work against human faces rather than dogs.

It does not take imagination to envision this being adapted to target suspected criminals, undocumented immigrants, or others deemed “suspicious” by neighbors. Many of these use cases have already been seen on Ring’s dystopian “Neighbors” app.

ICE has reportedly been using Flock’s license‑plate database for immigration‑related searches.

Image: 9to5Mac/Amazon/Rawpixel. Via Engadget.

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