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Sidewalk: The Next Frontier Of Amazon鈥檚 Surveillance Infrastructure

Amazon camera and Amazon Alexa speaker next to each other on a bedside table.
A panopticon-style surveillance system like this is a nightmare for civil rights and civil liberties.
Amazon camera and Amazon Alexa speaker next to each other on a bedside table.
Emiliano Falcon-Morano,
Policy Counsel, 老澳门开奖结果 of Massachusetts Technology for Liberty Program,
老澳门开奖结果 of Massachusetts
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June 18, 2021

Amazon has doubled down on its private surveillance infrastructure by Sidewalk, a private network to connect Amazon鈥檚 servers with smart home devices and gadgets sold by Amazon and its partner companies. With concerning privacy and security implications, this network automatically connects users鈥 Amazon Echo, Ring security cameras, and more to other devices and gadgets beyond their front door.

With this initiative, Amazon is once more confirming that its true allegiances do not lie with its customers; instead, the company is moving to expand its already capacious surveillance infrastructure.

A Wolf in Prime鈥檚 Clothing

Created in 1994 as an online bookstore, Amazon has grown over the past 25 years to become of the world鈥檚 largest digital marketplaces, a delivery service company, a cloud services provider, and even a leader of the space .

Today, Amazon is a trillion-dollar company systematically engaged in surveillance capitalism. Powerful companies and government agencies like the use Amazon鈥檚 cloud services platform to myriad surveillance and policing tools. The company has a relationship with law enforcement and intelligence agencies, including the sharing of customer and government contracts.

Today, Amazon is a trillion-dollar company systematically engaged in surveillance capitalism.

Amazon is also directly involved in the government surveillance business as a of dangerous surveillance technologies like facial recognition. After mounting pressure from the 老澳门开奖结果 and other civil liberties groups, Amazon a one-year moratorium on police use of its software in June 2020, and extended it a couple of weeks . (They did not explicitly mention if the moratorium covers agencies like the or .)

A few years ago, Amazon zeroed in on the lucrative business of the private security industry 鈥 including Ring, a company developing 鈥渟mart鈥 home solutions like doorbells equipped with security cameras. Soon enough, after Amazon鈥檚 aggressive marketing tactics that included free camera and police officers, police departments and law enforcement agencies became very interested in the possibility of accessing all sorts of private information without worrying about getting a warrant or going to a judge. , one in 10 U.S. police departments can access videos from millions of privately-owned home security cameras without a warrant.

One Network To Rule Them All?

Last week, we finally met the next frontier of Amazon鈥檚 power: .

厂颈诲别飞补濒办鈥檚 is not complex: Individuals that own specific Amazon devices, like an Amazon Echo or a Ring camera, contribute a small portion of their internet bandwidth to allow those devices to become bridges of the network. These devices, officially called Sidewalk Bridges, carry the 厂颈诲别飞补濒办鈥檚 network backbone using Bluetooth technology and other signals for covering large areas.

In this way, they become the nodes of this new mesh network connected to Amazon鈥檚 servers that spreads throughout neighborhoods. It will allow Amazon鈥檚 and its partner companies鈥 Sidewalk-enabled devices (like Bluetooth , wearable devices, and similar gadgets) to be always , with a maximum reach of half a mile away.

Here鈥檚 how this new initiative threatens our privacy rights and increases surveillance:

1. Sidewalk is an opt-out regime

Amazon decided to launch Sidewalk without consent from their users, only allowing them to opt out. Amazon automatically turned on Sidewalk; if users don鈥檛 want their Amazon devices to be part of the network, they will have to disable it manually. (Here is .)

The same applies to other Sidewalk-enabled devices like smart locks or tiles. Their users also need to go through a to opt out of the network.

This decision undermines people鈥檚 control over their devices and data because it exploits 鈥溾 to the detriment of the consumers. Behavioral economics explains that the 鈥渄efault bias鈥 drives people who have to choose between different options to remain with the default option, even when other options are available. In other words, people rarely go through the steps to reject the default setting 鈥 in this case, having your device get connected to Sidewalk and being a bridge, provided the device is capable of doing that. That is why the best privacy regimes are opt-in 鈥 not opt-out. Amazon knows this, but making Sidewalks opt-in would mean explaining the system and convincing people of its benefits, a step the company apparently wants to avoid.

2. Sidewalk will strengthen Amazon鈥檚 data collection and surveillance infrastructure

Amazon has posted a addressing privacy and security measures for the Sidewalk network. The paper, however, fails to explain how these measures would prevent unnecessary data collection for commercial gain and government surveillance.

The whitepaper discusses encryption protocols built into the network and how the design limits the amount of data collected and shared. But much of the whitepaper discusses high-level technical issues or unclear protocols, leaving consumers in the dark about what customer data Amazon collects from Sidewalk. For example, in its , Amazon says that there is an option to share the approximate location information of Sidewalk devices. But the technical whitepaper does not provide any explanation as to how this would work or what 鈥渁pproximate鈥 means.

3. Sidewalk does not have a stand-alone privacy policy

There is no public answer to the simple question of 鈥淲hat customer information does this new service collect?鈥 Amazon loosely refers to its general privacy policy covering the collection, management, and disclosure of the information collected without further explanation.

Unsurprisingly, the company explains it will keep complying with law enforcement requests and argues that 鈥渄ata minimization policies and encryption policies reduce the scope and usefulness of data that we would be able to produce if legally required.鈥 However, it doesn鈥檛 explain why, how, or what sort of data might not be useful in a hypothetical case.

This is significant because Sidewalk will likely become an integral part of the Ring security camera business. As Techcrunch , 鈥淩ing received over 1,800 legal demands during 2020, more than double from the year earlier.鈥 Still, Ring refuses to answer how many users or accounts had footage given to police. The company鈥檚 Sidewalk whitepaper gives no reason to believe policies and practices will vary between Ring and Sidewalk.

4. Sidewalk is Amazon鈥檚 private internet

Lastly, Amazon is virtually on the way to creating a private internet.

On the website, Amazon mentions that there will be a Sidewalk standard that other companies and developers can use to build Sidewalk-enabled devices. This would essentially create a private network that connects all sorts of devices 鈥 inside and outside our homes 鈥 with Amazon as its only gatekeeper. This would leave Amazon practically acting as an ISP, open to the same security , but without being subjected to the regulations ISPs are. (Amazon is also building Project , a low Earth orbit satellite constellation capable of providing broadband .)

Perhaps worse, the government would be able to get all the information it needs from one place. Now, and because of its commercial activities, Amazon already has access to a person's home address, live location, shopping habits, and much more. A private network that links security devices adds more behavioral data to this collection. For example, if one person takes a stroll around her neighborhood carrying a Sidewalk-enabled device, the Sidewalk ecosystem might reveal where the person went and when. A panopticon-style surveillance system like this is a nightmare for civil rights and civil liberties. We do not want an all-seeing eye in our communities.

A couple of years ago, the 老澳门开奖结果 said that buying a Ring camera is an individual decision that depends on many factors and considerations. Now, we have another factor to consider: Sidewalk and the possibility of contributing to Amazon鈥檚 growing surveillance infrastructure.

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