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Your Ring doorbell’s next job might not be finding lost pets

Internal emails obtained by 404 Media reveal CEO Jamie Siminoff wants to use the camera network to "zero out crime" despite public privacy pledges.

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Ring has a message for anyone worried about its new AI-powered search tool: it’s just for finding lost dogs. But internal correspondence obtained by 404 Media tells a different story, one where that same feature becomes the foundation for a much broader surveillance network.

Ring CEO Jamie Siminoff sent a message to employees after the “Search Party” launch. The tool currently tracks missing canines by scanning neighborhood camera feeds.

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But Siminoff called it a starting point. He described a future where Ring helps “zero out crime in neighborhoods.” The emails arrived weeks after a Super Bowl ad introduced millions to the dog finder. They also land as the company faces fresh heat over its expanding role in home security and policing.

The CEO’s private ambition

Siminoff didn’t hold back in that October email. “This is by far the most innovation that we have launched in the history of Ring,” he wrote. He introduced Search Party “first for finding dogs.” But he framed it as the foundation for “the most important pieces of tech and innovation to truly unlock the impact of our mission.”

That mission now includes neighborhood-wide crime elimination. “You can now see a future where we are able to zero out crime in neighborhoods,” Siminoff told staff.

“So many things to do to get there but for the first time ever we have the chance to fully complete what we started,” he added. The company hasn’t explained what “complete what we started” actually means. It hasn’t said how a dog tracker becomes a crime stopper either.

How the Kirk manhunt fits in

The 404 Media emails tie Ring directly to police work. The day after Charlie Kirk was assassinated, Siminoff sent staff an Instagram video. It showed a law enforcement officer describing how doorbell recordings helped track Kirk’s alleged killer.

“It is so important to create the conduit for public service agencies to efficiently work with our neighbors,” Siminoff wrote. He was promoting “Community Requests,” a feature that lets police formally ask Ring users for footage.

Siminoff appears to view high-profile incidents as proof that deeper police integration works. This comes after Ring revived its law enforcement partnerships following a brief pause in 2023. The company publicly distances itself from tracking people. The internal messages suggest a different priority.

What Ring tells the public

The official response sounds nothing like the emails. A Ring spokesperson told The Independent that Siminoff’s messages spoke broadly about long-term potential. Not specific product plans. “No single feature is designed to zero out crime,” the spokesperson said. Search Party is “purpose-built for specific use cases like helping reunite lost pets.”

The company emphasizes privacy and user choice. Search Party “does not process human biometrics or track people,” the spokesperson noted. Sharing footage through Community Requests is always the camera owner’s decision. But the internal messages show a CEO with a much larger role in mind for Ring.

New features like Familiar Faces and Fire Watch are already rolling out. Watch the gap between what Ring says today and what it actually builds. That’s where the real story lives.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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