Episode

Won't you see my neighbor? (feat. Matt Guariglia)

Podcast
Lock and Code
Published
Mar 8, 2026
Duration seconds
1907
Processing state
not_requested
Canonical source
https://lock-and-code.captivate.fm/episode/wont-you-see-my-neighbor-feat-matt-guariglia
Audio
https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2e806e9b-2fec-423c-9ccd-1292942fa131.mp3
JSON
/v1/public/podcasts/lock-and-code-112850/episodes/won-t-you-see-my-neighbor-feat-matt-guariglia
Markdown
/podcast/lock-and-code-112850/won-t-you-see-my-neighbor-feat-matt-guariglia.md

Actions

  • POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/lock-and-code-112850/episodes/won-t-you-see-my-neighbor-feat-matt-guariglia/transcription-requests
    Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.
  • GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/lock-and-code-112850/won-t-you-see-my-neighbor-feat-matt-guariglia.md
    Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.

Summary

On February 8, during the Super Bowl in the United States, countless owners of one of the most popular smart products today got a bit of a wakeup call: Their Ring doorbells could be used to see a whole lot more than they knew. In a commercial that was broadcast to one of most reliably enormous audiences in the country, Amazon, which owns the company Ring, promoted a new feature for its smart doorbells called “Search Party.” By scouring the footage of individual Ring cameras across a specific region, “Search Party” can implement AI-powered image recognition technology to find, as the commercial portrayed it, a lost dog. But immediately after the commercial aired, people began wondering what  else  their Ring cameras could be used to find. As US Senator Ed Markey  wrote on social media : “Ring’s Super Bowl ad exposed a scary truth: the technology in its doorbell cameras could be used to hunt down a lost pet…or a person. Amazon must discontinue its dystopian monitoring features.” These “dystopian monitoring features” aren’t entirely new, but that’s not to say that most Ring owners knew what they were allowing when they originally bought their devices. Bought by Amazon in 2018, Ring is the most popular manufacturer of a product that, as of 15 years ago, didn’t really exist. And while other “smart” innovations failed, smart doorbells have become a fixture of American neighborhoods, providing a mixture of convenience and security. For instance, a Ring owner away from home can verify and buzz in their mailman dropping off a package behind a gated entrance. Or, a Ring owner can see on their phone that the person knocking at their door is a salesman and choose to avoid talking to them. Or, a Ring owner can help police who are investigating a crime in their area b…