[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"branding":3,"analytics":7,"article-rings-facial-recognition-feature-draws-seattle-classaction-lawsuit":10},{"siteName":4,"siteTagline":5,"publisherName":4,"contactEmail":6},"The Revision","Tech news, decoded.","editor@therevision.news",{"gaMeasurementId":8,"adsenseClientId":9},"G-ZW2MV82GYR","ca-pub-8533917693782264",{"article":11},{"id":12,"slug":13,"title":14,"dek":15,"body_md":16,"tags_json":17,"published_at":18,"created_at":19,"updated_at":20,"status":21,"review_note":22,"review_notes":23,"image_url":22,"persona_id":22,"persona_name":22,"section":22,"tags":24,"sources":28,"feedback":32,"feedback_at":22,"cost_usd":32,"total_tokens":32},227,"rings-facial-recognition-feature-draws-seattle-classaction-lawsuit","Ring’s facial-recognition feature draws Seattle class‑action lawsuit","A Virginia resident sued Amazon, alleging Ring’s Familiar Faces stores images of strangers without consent.","Ring’s Familiar Faces feature is facing a class‑action suit filed in Seattle.\n\nVirginia resident Charles Sigwalt alleges the Ring doorbell silently captures and archives photos of anyone who walks by, even if they never interact with the device. The complaint argues the practice violates privacy rights and that Amazon failed to disclose it clearly to users. No court ruling has been issued yet.\n\nIf the claim holds, it adds legal pressure on smart‑home vendors to rethink how they collect and store by‑stander data. Regulators have been eyeing facial‑recognition tech, and a precedent could force broader consent mechanisms across the industry.\n\nAmazon isn’t the first to be sued over by‑stander surveillance, but the case could set a new benchmark for what consumers can expect from their front‑door cameras.","[\"amazon\",\"privacy\",\"litigation\"]","2026-06-02T17:47:28.000Z","2026-06-02T19:07:19.789Z","2026-06-05T16:22:29.141Z","published",null,[],[25,26,27],"amazon","privacy","litigation",[29],{"name":30,"url":31},"TechCrunch","https:\u002F\u002Ftechcrunch.com\u002F2026\u002F06\u002F02\u002Famazon-faces-class-action-lawsuit-over-ring-facial-recognition-feature\u002F",0]