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I bet all your neighbours Ring doorbells (illegally) record you as you walk out ………..
Ring Doorbells have the facility to adjust the parameters via the app to restrict the footage to just the owner’s property boundary so, unless anyone steps on your property it shouldn’t trigger. There are obviously those that don’t bother changing the parameters.

This issue became a legal matter for two residents not far from me, as the owner of a Ring doorbell, paired with extra cameras, was taken to court by his neighbour. The case Fairhurst vs Woodard claimed the neighbours doorbell camera was intrusive as it showed images of the neighbours garden from a paired camera mounted on his shed.
In the doorbell owners defence he’d had his new car previously stolen, hence the shed camera pointing at his rear garden parking space, and in the neighbours defence it was intrusive as the footage also captured their garden. The court findings supported the ‘intrusive’ claim and the Ring doorbell owner had to pay a substantial fine ……….. but not solely for the camera images, but more because the doorbell camera was set to audio recording. The audio recording was deemed more intrusive than the images.