Amazon's Ring cameras are vulnerable to hackers, lawsuit
in U.S. claims
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[December 28, 2019] By
Jonathan Stempel
(Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> and its
Ring home security camera unit have been sued by an Alabama homeowner
who said the cameras' defective design leaves purchasers vulnerable to
cyberattacks.
In a proposed class action filed on Thursday, John Baker Orange said an
unknown hacker recently accessed his Ring camera while his children,
ages 7, 9 and 10, were playing basketball on the driveway, and through
its speaker system encouraged them to move closer to the camera.
Orange, who said he paid $249 for his camera in July, said the cameras
work only when connected to the internet, and are "fatally flawed"
because they do not protect against cyberattacks, despite Ring's
assurances of "peace of mind" and "smart security here, there,
everywhere."
A spokeswoman for Ring said the Santa Monica, California-based company
does not discuss legal matters.
The complaint filed in Los Angeles federal court seeks unspecified
damages from Ring and Seattle-based Amazon, as well as improved security
for new and existing Ring cameras.
It followed several reported incidents of hackers accessing homes
through Ring cameras, including when a man repeatedly called an
8-year-old Mississippi girl a racial slur and claimed he was Santa
Claus.
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The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics centre in Boves,
France, November 5, 2019. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
"A company that sells a device that is supposed to protect occupants of a home
shouldn't become a platform for potentially endangering those occupants," John
Yanchunis, a lawyer for Orange, said in an interview.
Ring's main product is a doorbell that contains a security camera and lets
homeowners monitor and communicate with visitors through a phone app even if
they are not at home.
Amazon has said it bought Ring in April 2018 for $839 million in cash.
Orange, who lives in Jefferson County, Alabama, said he changed his
"medium-strong" password and began using two-factor authentication for his
camera after learning about the incident involving his children.
"So many devices are tethered to the Internet, and consumers simply don't have a
realization of how that can be so easily exploited," Yanchunis said.
The case is Orange v Ring LLC et al, U.S. District Court, Central District of
California, No. 19-10899.
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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