If you want to lock down your Ring footage and be certain no one can access it, not even Ring, you can enable Ring’s end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature.
End-to-end encryption means that the videos are encrypted both in transit, when they travel back and forth from your home to the company, and at rest while sitting on Ring’s servers. This keeps your recordings secure and private, and it prevents law enforcement or anyone else from seeing your videos.
However, enabling E2EE will disable many other Ring features, including shared accounts, person detection, facial recognition, 24/7 recording, pre-roll recording, and AI video search. The full list of affected features, as well as detailed instructions for enabling E2EE, are detailed on Ring’s end-to-end encryption support page.
Given all of the functionality that you lose by enabling E2EE, the trade-offs might not be worth it to you. And there are other options on the market that provide smart features along with E2EE (more on that below).
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