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You'd have to be r-slurred :marseyautism: to let random third :marseythirdeye: party :marseypartyzoom: contractors spy on you

https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf/complaint_ring.pdf

>Despite promising greater security :marseysecuritron: as its products’ core feature, Ring ignored information security :marseysecuritron: considerations when management believed they would :marseymid: interfere with growth. In pursuit of rapid product :marseyoctopus2: development, before :marseyskellington: September 2017, Ring did not limit access :marsey403: to customers’ video :marseyzeldalinktimechild: data to employees who needed the access :marsey403: to perform their job function (e.g., customer support, improvement of that product, etc.). To the contrary, Ring gave every employee—as well as hundreds of Ukraine-based third-party contractors—full access :marsey403: to every customer video, regardless of whether the employee or contractor :marseythebuilder: actually :marseyakshually: needed that access :marsey403: to perform his or her job function.

>As a result of this dangerously overbroad access :marsey403: and lax attitude toward privacy and security, employees and third-party contractors were able to view, download, and transfer customers’ sensitive :marseypearlclutch2: video :marseyzeldabeedle: data for their own purposes. For example, between :marseyzeldalinkpast: June and August :marcusbeachtowel: 2017, a Ring employee viewed thousands of video :marseycrystalmaiden: recordings belonging to at least 81 unique female :marseywomanmoment: users (including customers and Ring employees) of Ring Stick :marseyblind: Up Cams. The employee focused his prurient searches on cameras with names indicating that they surveilled an intimate space, such as “Master Bedroom,” “Master Bathroom,” or “Spy Cam.” On hundreds of occasions during this three-month period, the employee perused female :marseysouthernbelle5: customers’ and employees’ videos, often for an hour or more each day. Undetected by Ring, the employee continued spying :marseydisguise: for months.

>Ring failed to detect this inappropriate access :marsey403: through any technical means. By good fortune, in August :marseyaugust: 2017, an employee discovered her co-worker’s actions and reported the misconduct to her supervisor. Initially, the supervisor discounted the report, telling the female :marseywall: employee that it is “normal” for an engineer :marseythebuilder: to view so many accounts. Only after the supervisor noticed that the male employee was only viewing videos of “pretty girls” did the supervisor escalate the report :marseyreport: of misconduct. Only at that point :marseydicklet: did Ring review :marseynostalgiacritic: a portion of the employee’s activity and, ultimately, terminate his employment.

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Wow, you must be a JP fan.

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they do make some great :marseyaward: rifles :marseyarabcelebration: snappy :marppy:

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