In this episode of Beer and Conversation with Pigweed and Crowhill, we start with a light IPA, but quickly get into a heavy topic: how devices like Ring cameras are quietly reshaping everyday surveillance.
What begins as a helpful feature — like Ring’s “Search Party” for finding lost pets — raises bigger questions. If cameras can identify your dog, what else are they tracking? And who ultimately has access to that data?
We explore the tradeoffs between convenience and privacy, including:
- How networked cameras could allow real-time tracking of people and vehicles
- The growing normalization of constant recording in public (and even private) spaces
- The risks of data collection happening before you opt in or out
- Why the question “What do you have to hide?” might be the wrong one
- How surveillance tools—originally built for safety—can be misused by individuals, corporations, or governments
Along the way, we connect Ring cameras to broader trends: dash cams, license plate scanners, facial recognition, and even government surveillance programs. The result? A world where everything is recorded—and the real question is not *if* it will be used, but *how*.
Is this just the cost of modern convenience, or are we drifting toward something much bigger?
Grab a drink and join the conversation.
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