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Illinois residents sue Amazon over Ring biometric data

Amazon faces a class-action lawsuit for secretly using Ring doorbells' facial-recognition feature without user consent, violating Illinois' biometric privacy laws which could result in fines of $1,000 to $5,000 per person affected. If successful, this lawsuit could set a precedent for how tech companies handle facial-recognition data and force Amazon to change its practices.

Amazon faces class action lawsuit over Ring facial-recognition feature
TechCrunch โ€” 2 June 2026
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Amazon has been hit with a class-action lawsuit for its Ring doorbellโ€™s facial-recognition tool, which plaintiffs say secretly scanned usersโ€™ faces without proper consent. The lawsuit, filed in Illinois, claims the feature violates state privacy laws by collecting biometric dataโ€”including facial scansโ€”without explicit permission. The case could force Amazon to change how Ring handles sensitive personal data or face hefty fines.

Ringโ€™s facial-recognition feature, part of its โ€œNeighborsโ€ app, lets users identify people near their homes using AI-powered cameras. But critics argue the tool crosses privacy lines by analyzing faces in real time without clear warnings to those being scanned. Illinois has strict biometric privacy laws, and violating them can lead to $1,000 to $5,000 fines per person affected. If the lawsuit succeeds, Amazon could be on the hook for millions in penalties.

This case matters because itโ€™s the latest pushback against tech companies collecting biometric data without oversight. Lawmakers and privacy advocates have long warned that facial recognition can enable surveillance without consent, especially in public spaces. Ringโ€™s cameras are already controversial for their role in neighborhood surveillance and police partnerships. If the lawsuit moves forward, it could set a precedent for how companies deploy facial-recognition tech in consumer devices.

Amazon hasnโ€™t commented on the lawsuit yet, but the case adds to its growing legal troubles over surveillance and privacy. Earlier this year, regulators fined Ring $5.8 million for letting employees access customer videos. Now, this lawsuit could force Amazon to rethink how it balances security with privacyโ€”or face stricter rules in the future. For users, the stakes are high: their faces could be scanned without their knowledge every time they step near a Ring doorbell.

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