| ▲ | SV_BubbleTime 6 hours ago | |||||||||||||
>enable end-to-end encryption between the camera and your phone. So… exactly not the part I care about? Cool, it’s encrypted on transit to me… now what about at rest with them? Is it encrypted and they absolutely can not view or hand that footage to police/gov? No. | ||||||||||||||
| ▲ | m348e912 6 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||
> Cool, it’s encrypted on transit to me… now what about at rest with them? Is it encrypted and they absolutely can not view or hand that footage to police/gov? No. Technically yes, e2e encryption means video hosted on their servers is only viewable by devices with decryption keys. So if the police/gov brought a subpoena to request the video, Ring could only offer them the encrypted video. They would have to take possession of your phone and gain access in order to decrypt and view the video. In this case the "ends" in the e2e encryption is the camera and your phone. | ||||||||||||||
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