Ring expands end-to-end encryption to its battery-powered devices

Ring is expanding its end-to-end encryption (E2EE) offering to battery-powered cameras and doorbells, which the Amazon-owned company says are its best-selling products. It brought E2EE to several wired models last year.

“We believe we should offer a full range of privacy options to as many customers as possible,” a Ring blog post reads. “And we know that different devices make sense for different living situations. That’s why we’ve worked hard to bring this industry-leading privacy feature to as many of our camera and doorbell products as possible.”

With E2EE enabled, only you will be able to access videos captured by your Ring camera. Ring and Amazon won’t be able to see them. It recently emerged that Amazon has given US law enforcement footage from Ring cameras on several occasions without a court order or user consent. E2EE should prevent that from happening.

Recordings will only be accessible from a single mobile device. According to Ring’s white paper, a direct connection is made between the Ring device and the phone over WiFi, with cryptographic keys and identity certificates used to establish trust between the two, and to encrypt and decrypt videos.

There are some tradeoffs for those who use E2EE. You won’t be able to access Ring footage on other devices, such as Echo Show. Other features will be disabled, including the Event Timeline, Quick Replies, Alexa Greetings and Bird’s Eye View, which debuted on the Video Doorbell Pro 2 last year.

Elsewhere, Ring is making it easier to save videos when you get rid of one of its devices. Via the Deactivated Device State feature, subscribers will be able to save recordings from the doorbell or camera to their Ring account. Until now, the only officially supported way to retain the videos was by downloading them to a computer. If you cancel your subscription, Ring will delete all the videos and events from your account, but you’ll be able to download the recordings first.

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Microsoft’s Xbox Elite Series 2 wireless controller is now available in white

Microsoft Xbox has launched a new Elite Series 2 controller with a white cover plate, and it’s now available for pre-order. Like its black counterpart, the Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2 – Core in white was designed with competitive gamers in mind, with its wrap-around rubberized grip, shorter hair trigger locks and 40 hours of battery life. It’s now available for pre-order from the Xbox website and select retailers for $130. That’s much cheaper than the black version that has a standard retail price of $180, because it doesn’t come with a case and other spare parts needed for customization. 

Instead, Xbox is selling a separate Complete Component Pack, which is also available for pre-order, for $60. The pack includes a carrying case, a thumbstick-adjustment tool, a charging dock, two classic thumbsticks, one tall thumbstick, one dome thumbstick, one cross-shaped D-pad, two medium and two mini paddles, as well as a USB-C cable. By selling the pack separately, that means those who already have all those components from the black Elite Series 2 will be able to buy the new controller on its own at a cheaper price. However, that’s $10 more than the black version for those who want to get both the white controller and the component pack.

In addition to announcing its new products, Xbox has also revealed that it’s adding the Elite Series 2 Controllers to the Xbox Design Lab this holiday season. That means players will be able purchase personalized controllers designed with various colors and patterns of their choosing, so they can go beyond these current black and white options. 

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Hulu + Live TV is $20 off for three months for new and returning subscribers

If you’ve been looking to cut the cord for good, Hulu’s latest promotion on its Live TV subscription service may give you the push you need to do so. The streaming company has knocked $20 off its Live TV plan for three months for new and returning customers. That means you’ll pay $50 per month for the service instead of the usual $70 for the first three months that you’re subscribed.

Subscribe to Hulu + Live TV – $50/month

This is a solid deal considering how rarely discounts on live TV subscription plans come around, namely Hulu’s and YouTube’s offerings. Hulu + Live TV also includes access to Hulu’s ad-supported streaming library as well as Disney+ and ESPN+, so you’re really getting access to four different platforms for only $50 per month for a limited time. The Live TV portion of the membership provides access to over 75 sports, entertainment and lifestyle channels, plus you can watch two streams simultaneously and record shows to your hearts desire with unlimited cloud DVR. The latter is a relatively new feature as Hulu got rid of its paid “Enhanced Cloud DVR” add-on earlier this year when it decided to make unlimited DVR a standard feature of its Live TV plan.

You have until October 5th to sign up for Hulu’s three-month offer. The price of Live TV will go back up to the $70 after your first three months, but you can cancel at any time. It’s also worth noting that the company has already planned a price hike, too: as of December 8th, 2022, the price of Hulu + Live TV will go up to $75 per month. That makes this deal even more compelling if you’ve been interested in trying out a live TV service like this.

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Kiwi Farms is effectively offline following campaign to deplatform the hate site

The days where Kiwi Farms is a functioning website appear to be numbered. After Cloudflare cut the forum off over the weekend, other essential internet services, including hCaptcha, followed suit. Kiwi Farms briefly moved to a Russian domain and DDoS-Guard on Sunday, but as of Tuesday morning, visiting the website returns an error page that says it can’t load.

“This meme about Russia being a free country is a joke,” Kiwi Farms founder Joshua Moon wrote on Telegram, adding that he could not see a future where the website would be able to operate normally. Moon’s post references 8chan and Daily Stormer, two websites that, while they continue to exist, are essentially inaccessible after public efforts to deplatform were successful.

“The campaign is over. We won,” streamer and political commentator Clara “Keffals” Sorrenti wrote in a statement she shared on Friday. Sorrenti was a recent target of a coordinated and vicious harassment campaign that originated on Kiwi Farms and saw her doxxed and swatted. Sorrenti started the DropKiwifarms hashtag to urge Cloudflare and other critical internet infrastructure providers to drop the website. The campaign gained critical mass after NBC News published a story about Kiwi Farms, detailing the forum’s sordid past. Since its founding in 2013, at least three suicides have been linked to harassment campaigns that originated on the website.

“Many sites that have faced pressure campaigns to be deplatformed, like 8chan and Daily Stormer, are still online. They are nevertheless completely impotent,” Sorrenti said. “Whether or not we are able to completely remove Kiwi Farms from the internet is irrelevant to the fact that the goals of our campaign have not only been achieved, but have achieved more than we could have ever expected.”