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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday August 17 2019, @01:43AM   Printer-friendly
from the no-more-peeking-cams dept.

Submitted via IRC for SoyCow2718

Google removes option to disable Nest cams' status light

No more stashing your Nest security cameras in the bushes to catch burglars unaware: Google informed users on Wednesday that it's removing the option to turn off the status light that indicates when your Nest camera is recording.

You can still dim the light that shows when Google's Nest, Dropcam, and Nest Hello cameras are on and sending video and audio to Nest, Google said, but you can't make it go away on new cameras. If the camera is on, it's going to tell people that it's on – with its green status light in Nest and Nest Home and the blue status light in Dropcam – in furtherance of Google's newest commitment to privacy.

Google introduced its new privacy commitment at its I/O 2019 developers conference in May, in order to explain how its connected home devices and services work.

The setting that enabled users to turn off the status light is being removed on all new cameras. When the cameras' live video is streamed from the Nest app, the status light will blink. The update will be done over-the-air for all Nest cams: Google's update notice said that the company was rolling out the changes as of Wednesday, 14 August 2019.

The change is a plus for the privacy-aware: say, people who are wary of their Airbnb hosts secretly filming them in the shower or bedroom.

On the other end of the spectrum, it's an outrage to some users who say they've spent big bucks on cameras that can stay hidden. One comment on Google's update notice called it "an absurd update and an invasion of my rights as a consumer" – more of a "post-purchase middle finger" to customers than a privacy plus.


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  • (Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 17 2019, @07:57AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 17 2019, @07:57AM (#881465)

    Absurd.

    Yes, Google -- removing the option to control the LED for end users, is about privacy. Right. What a joke. Way to change the discussion. Asshats!

    No .. Google YOU are the threat to privacy. Not the end user. So, removing the ability for the user to control a LED, which is controlled by SOFTWARE.. that doesn't help. What's needed is that all LEDs for microphones and cameras are HARDWIRED, irrevocably hardwired so that if the camera has power? If the mic is energized? BAM! The LED is on.

    Otherwise, sure.. Google can remove the option to control the LED. But that is just done to make people THINK the LED has no software control, and to disassociate the thought of it from consumers minds. Because in reality?

    Google can still record, whenever it wants, and keep that LED off.

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