The news: Amazon’s Ring canceled its partnership with Flock Safety following backlash over a Super Bowl ad that promoted Search Party, a content-sharing program unrelated to Flock, per The Verge.
The smart doorbell company said in an announcement that the Flock integration—though never launched—would have required “significantly more time and resources than anticipated.” Flock provides security hardware and software, including AI-enabled automated license plate recognition.
The background: The companies’ deal was announced in October and would have integrated Flock with a Ring program called Community Requests, which lets users optionally share camera video with police.
Ring then aired a Super Bowl commercial promoting Search Party, which uses AI to help users find lost pets in a neighborhood. The feature has come under fire for being turned on by default in eligible cameras, per GeekWire.
Privacy advocates and lawmakers raised concerns about Ring data privacy in the wake of the ad’s appearance.
- “Get this creepy technology away from our homes,” Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey said in an open letter to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy.
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a digital rights group, called Search Party a “surveillance nightmare” and potentially a “scary overreach of the surveillance state.”
Zooming out: Pressure is increasing for companies to respect and protect user privacy, even in public places, as AI-powered and surveillance-capable products like Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses and connected home devices become more mainstream.
- The broken deal between Ring and Flock is a reminder that consumer tolerance for AI-assisted data sharing, especially when it involves biometric information or law enforcement, is highly sensitive.
- Even opt-in programs can spark backlash if users feel they weren’t properly informed or if potential uses of their data feel opaque.
Implications for brands: The reputational risk of accessing broader user data streams can outweigh the functional benefits.
- Being perceived as an “invasive” company, or one that blurs the line between convenience and surveillance, can stop customer loyalty dead in its tracks.
- Drawing scrutiny from advocacy groups or lawmakers could also damage brand perception.
Clear disclosures, meaningful consent, and a demonstrable product value are becoming central to brand equity. Marketers should assume that consumers are increasingly evaluating product features and the broader AI and data ecosystems surrounding them.
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