Jamie Siminoff
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I think it's more of like the anomaly detection and allowing people to make it so that if, you know, if someone comes in that you're aware of what's happening around the neighborhood, because right now there's like no awareness there.
of what's going on around.
And so I don't think it's as dystopian as where you're going.
It's really, it's not what we're building.
And I do think we can impact things to a really high level in neighborhoods, which again, to the Gen 2-y thing, I mean, in neighborhoods is what we're talking about, that with AI and what we're doing with a bunch of rings together.
And I think even dog search party is a good way to look at it, which is like, how do these cameras come together for good in a neighborhood?
No, because I mean, not how it's built and not while I'm here because the way it works is that you will decide if you want to or not want to share that video, which is your property, with someone.
Now, once you share it, then it is like up to us to figure out to your point of like...
How do we share it?
How do we make sure that the digital fingerprint goes all the way through?
Or how does that chain of custody work of this video to make sure there's no fake in the process of it?
I think this is why it is important to build these systems.
It's going to be important.
I mean, this is like where also government is going to have to step in.
We're going to have to deal with this across the board because we also have video coming off of cell phones.
So we do need to figure out how to build...
and there's going to be companies, you know, Axon would probably be one of the companies.
I'm not, I don't want to speak for them, but you know, would they have evidence.com?
So to build these evidentiary systems to take in, because there's, there's ring is one, one part of taking in sort of data around, call it a crime scene.
You know, cell phone video is maybe even more still today than that.