this post was submitted on 06 Oct 2025
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A Boring Dystopia

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Jason Bassler | @JasonBassler1

Big Brother just got an upgrade.

Starting December, Amazon’s Ring cameras will scan and recognize faces. Don’t want to be in their database? Too bad — walk past a Ring and your face can be stored, tagged, & analyzed without consent.

One step closer to total surveillance.

[Image: A Ring doorbell camera mounted on a brick wall. A digital overlay shows facial recognition scanning a person's face with grid lines. Text on the right reads "Amazon's Ring Adds Facial Recognition to Home Security" with additional text below.]

6:00 PM | Oct 4, 2025

Source: https://x.com/JasonBassler1/status/1974640686419857516

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[–] Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

I know, which is why it's not going to be my primary lock.

For someone to bypass my locks, instead of breaking a window, a bunch of things have to come about and they're all "and" statements.

First, I would have to forget to lock the door, I don't typically forget, I just get anxiety about it and it can ruin a nice day. With the electric lock I would be content someone can't just opportunisticly walk in.

And someone would have to want to get in my house enough to put effort into it. They're breaking a window at this point regardless of the locks. Or they're testing a neighbour's door, with only one lock.

And they would have to identify that only the electric lock is active.

And they would have to have the tools/skills to break an electric lock. Along with the skills/tools to break a traditional lock (if they're both engaged)

If any of those statements is false, I would be no worse off, or better off, with an electric lock. If they want in, they're coming through a window.

I did think about a Yale as an auxiliary lock, but I've run up against it's advantages (read: locking myself out) more than once. Also, if they can bypass the main lock, they can bypass a Yale, I figure, as it's a similar skillset.

"All electronic locks can be hacked" is the same statement as "all tumbler locks can be picked". I'm guessing you still use one though.