In the News
Amazon’s Ring has canceled a planned partnership with surveillance company Flock Safety after facing public backlash over a Super Bowl ad promoting its new AI feature. The “Search Party” tool uses neighborhood Ring cameras to help find lost pets. Critics warned that the ad glossed over larger concerns about expanding surveillance and data sharing with law enforcement.
The partnership with Flock, known for its automated license plate readers used by police agencies, had not yet been implemented. Ring says no customer data was shared.

Here’s Our Take
This episode highlights a deeper issue. Americans are increasingly uneasy when private companies frame more surveillance as a public good. What was marketed as a feel good story about lost pets quickly raised concerns about how easily these tools could be used to track people and vehicles.
Public trust is fragile. When surveillance features are enabled by default or designed to integrate with law enforcement systems, people understandably question where the line is drawn. Once these networks expand, rolling them back becomes difficult.
Ring’s reversal shows that public scrutiny still matters. Companies respond when customers push back.
Closing
Libertas believes clear limits are essential when private surveillance tools intersect with government power. Protecting privacy means setting guardrails before systems grow too large to control. We will continue advocating for transparency, consent, and strong boundaries between corporate data collection and law enforcement access.
