Erm… you need to read to Vox article I linked to. Also, they definitely record and store video. Ring Plus Protection lets you “Access videos of every Ring, Motion, and Live View event for up to 60 days”.
Dude, I know you’re not talking about hacking, but to prevent hacking, they need to encrypt files separately, by a hash, for security reasons. Because of this, they can’t just ‘view’ the videos. They have the file, but they need the password to view it too. (1/2)
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Think of it this way. If they could just view ‘any’ video, then a single hacker just needs to get a hand of 1 key from Amazon, and they can open any account, or any video. This is why data is encrypted by the user’s details, so unless you have that, you can’t open it.
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You missed the point: They can actually view the videos. They’ve said they can. If the videos are encrypted, they have the key.
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