US State Law Disclosures:

Last Updated: July 12, 2024

This additional state-specific privacy disclosure page (“Disclosure”) supplements the Ring Privacy Notice and is effective as of July 12, 2024. The Ring Privacy Notice describes the personal information that we collect, the sources from which we collect it, the purposes for which we use it, the limited circumstances under which we share personal information, and with whom we share it. These additional disclosures are required by certain state privacy laws, and provide a Notice at Collection under the California Privacy Rights Act:

    1. Categories of personal information collected. The personal information that Ring collects, or has collected, from consumers in the twelve months prior to the effective date above, falls into the following categories established by the California Privacy Rights Act and other state privacy laws, depending on which Ring service is used:
    • identifiers such as your name, address, phone numbers, IP address, your Ring account log-in information, or a government-issued identifier (e.g., certain types of ID provided for identity verification may in some cases reflect your citizenship or immigration status);
    • personal information, such as payment card information;
    • information that may reveal your age, gender, or other protected classifications, for example if you share this information with us as part of participating in our beta program or responding to a survey;
    • commercial information, such as purchase history;
    • internet or other electronic network activity information, including video and audio content interaction information, such as downloads, streams, and playback details; or information used to prevent or detect fraud or other unauthorized activity, including information about affected customers;
    • geolocation data, such as the location of devices to provide location- or community-based features like the Neighbors app, which may in some cases constitute precise geolocation information;
    • audio or visual information, such as video or audio recordings, live video or audio streams, or images collected or stored in connection with Ring services;
    • activity information, such as alarm events;
    • professional information, for example data you may provide about your business; and
    • inference data, such as information about your interest in different Ring products and services.
    2. Categories of personal information disclosed for a business purpose. The personal information that Ring may have disclosed for a business purpose to the third parties identified in the “Information Sharing” section of the Ring Privacy Notice in the twelve months prior to the effective date above falls into the following categories established by the California Privacy Rights Act and other state privacy laws, depending on which Ring services are used:
    • identifiers such as your name, address, phone numbers, IP address, or government ID, for example if you choose to connect with us through our customer support, if you order a product from Ring delivered by a third-party carrier, or if we use a third-party service to verify your identity, certain types of ID provided for identity verification, which may in some cases reflect your citizenship or immigration status;
    • personal information, such as payment card details, for example if we use a third-party payment processor;
    • information that may reveal your age, gender, or other protected classifications, for example if you choose to participate in a survey distributed by a survey provider;
    • commercial information, such as the details of a product or service you purchased if a third-party service provider assists in providing that product or service to you;
    • internet or other electronic network activity information, such as if we use a service provider to help us gather crash reports for analyzing the health of our devices and services, or information used to prevent or detect fraud or other unauthorized activity, which may require disclosing certain information about potentially affected customers to law enforcement;
    • geolocation data, which may constitute precise geolocation data;
    • audio or visual information, for example recordings of customer service phone calls for quality assurance purposes;
    • activity information, such as alarm events, if you subscribe to professional monitoring; and
    • professional information, for example data you may provide about your business if you interact with Ring as a representative of a vendor or business partner of ours in order to conduct business between our companies.
    3. Your Data Rights: You may have certain data rights under state privacy laws, including to request information about the collection of your personal information by Ring, to access your personal information in a portable format, and to correct or delete your personal information. If you wish to do any of these things, please visit here or contact Customer Service. You may have the right to appeal the denial of any of these rights by contacting Customer Service. Depending on your data choices, certain services may be limited or unavailable. To ensure the security of your Ring account, we will generally ask you to verify your request using the contact information you have already provided. If you do not have an account, or if you are an authorized agent under applicable state law, please contact Customer Service.

    4. No Sale or Sharing of Personal Information.: In the twelve months prior to the effective date of this Disclosure, Ring has not sold or shared any personal information of consumers, as those terms are defined under the California Privacy Rights Act.
    5. De-identified Data Disclosure.: out attempting to re-identify it or treats such data as personal data subject to applicable law.
    6. California Privacy Rights Act Sensitive Personal Information Disclosure.. The categories of data that Ring collects and discloses for a business purpose include “sensitive personal information” as defined under the California Privacy Rights Act. Ring does not use or disclose sensitive personal information for any purpose not expressly permitted by the California Privacy Rights Act.
    7. California Privacy Rights Act Retention Disclosure. To enable your continued use of Ring Services, we keep your personal information for as long as it is required in order to fulfill the relevant purposes described in the Ring Privacy Notice, as permitted or as may be required by law, or as otherwise communicated to you. For example, we retain your transaction history so that you can review past purchases (and repeat orders if desired) and what addresses you have shipped orders to, and to improve the relevance of products and content we recommend.
    8. California Privacy Rights Act Non-discrimination Statement. Ring will not discriminate against any consumer for exercising their rights under the California Privacy Rights Act.
    9. Colorado Privacy Act and Oregon Consumer Privacy Act Profiling Disclosure. Ring does not engage in profiling of consumers in furtherance of automated decisions that produce legal or similarly significant effects, as those terms are defined under the Colorado Privacy Act or Oregon Consumer Privacy Act.
    10. Oregon Consumer Privacy Act Controller Entity Disclosure. The controller entity that is subject to the Ring Privacy Notice and this Disclosure is Ring LLC.

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