Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

Ring now lets anyone use the Neighbors app to report and find lost pets

Ring brings AI and community together to find lost pets

Add as a preferred source on Google
Ring Search Party
Amazon

Millions of dogs go missing in the US every year, turning a routine walk or an open gate into a stressful search for owners. Ring wants to make those searches faster and more community-driven.

The company is now opening up its Search Party for Dogs feature so that anyone with a lost pet can ask for help through the Neighbors app, even if they do not own a Ring camera themselves.

For the uninitiated, Search Party for Dogs is an AI-powered feature that was launched a few months ago. It allowed Ring camera owners to work together in report and spot missing dogs in their neighborhoods.

Recommended Videos

Now, Ring is expanding that reach, letting all pet owners tap into the same network of neighbors and outdoor cameras when a dog goes missing.

How Search Party for Dogs works in the Neighbors app

Pet owners can report a lost dog in the Neighbors app by adding photos and details about their dog. That information is then shared with nearby Ring users, whose outdoor cameras can help look for potential matches.

The system relies on AI to compare a reported missing dog with animals spotted on Ring’s outdoor cameras. Indoor Ring cameras are not used for this feature. If a Ring camera detects a dog that could be a match, the camera owner receives an alert showing an image of the dog along with relevant video clips.

From there, the camera owner can decide what to do next. They can choose to share the footage with the pet’s owner, reach out directly, or even ignore Search Party and Community Requests alerts entirely.

Ring says the idea is to make finding a lost dog a shared effort, rather than something owners have to handle alone. By opening Search Party for Dogs to everyone through the Neighbors app, Ring is betting that community eyes, AI, and a little goodwill can help reunite more dogs with their families faster.

In other Ring-related news, the company has also added a security seal that helps prevent camera footage from being tampered with, reinforcing its focus on trust and transparency.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
Spotify removed tens of thousands of fake podcasts tied to online drug sales
Spotify is cleaning up thousands of fake podcasts linked to scam websites
spotify

Spotify has spent the past year quietly removing tens of thousands of fake podcasts that were allegedly being used to promote illegal online pharmacies and scam websites. Now, a new congressional report is raising questions about how the scheme was able to flourish on one of the world's largest audio platforms in the first place.

According to the Wired report, bad actors created thousands of fake podcasts that were never intended to attract real listeners. Instead, they were designed to manipulate Spotify’s search rankings and boost the visibility of websites selling prescription drugs without prescriptions, including opioids, stimulants, and benzodiazepines.

Read more
I tried Acer’s new 5K MiniLED Gaming monitor, and OLED kept popping into my head
After seeing it in action at Computex, I finally understand where MiniLED shines and where OLED still wins.
MiniLED vs OLED Hands On Computex 2026

If Computex 2026 taught me one thing, it's that monitor makers are no longer interested in building one-trick ponies. They want displays that can wear multiple hats, seamlessly switching between work and play without making users choose. Acer's new Nitro XV345CKR P is perhaps the best example of that philosophy, and after spending time with it on the show floor, I walked away impressed by its ambition while also questioning whether MiniLED is really the future for gaming monitors.

I've always had a slightly complicated relationship with MiniLED. On a massive living room TV, it works wonders because you're sitting several feet away, and the local dimming zones blend beautifully. Put the same technology on a monitor that's sitting barely two feet from your face, however, and suddenly you're no longer admiring the display, you're inspecting the physics behind it.

Read more
Google’s new Gemini TV controls are here and TCL owners get them first
Your TCL TV can now fix its own picture with a simple voice command
TCL 85-inch T7 QLED deal

Adjusting your Google TV settings is one of those things that sounds simple until you are three menus deep trying to find the brightness slider. Google just made that whole experience a lot less annoying.

The company has rolled out new controls for Gemini, and TCL is the exclusive launch partner, meaning TCL TV owners get access to the feature for the first 60 days before it opens up to other Google TV brands.

Read more