Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. Business
  4. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Amazon completes its acquisition of Ring, the video doorbell maker

Add as a preferred source on Google
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Ring, the company behind the popular video doorbell, now has a new parent and a new price. On Thursday, April 12, Amazon announced that it completed the acquisition of the smart home company, and to celebrate, is offering the video doorbell for the lowered price of $100.

“Our mission to reduce crime in neighborhoods has been at the core of everything we do at Ring,” said Jamie Siminoff, CEO and Chief Inventor of Ring. “Together with Amazon, we will accelerate our mission dramatically by connecting more neighbors globally and making our security devices and systems more affordable and accessible. The entire Ring team is excited to continue working hard to create products and services that bring real benefits to people’s lives and build safer communities for all our neighbors.”

Recommended Videos

In a Los Angeles Police Department pilot program, the Ring Video Doorbell has proven successful in clamping down on burglaries in neighborhoods. In fact, in areas where doorbells were installed, theft fell by as much as 55 percent. Now that Amazon is making the smart home device more accessible than ever, the hope is that an even greater swath of Americans will be able to protect themselves and their loved ones.

“Ring’s talented team has invented home security products and services that customers love. We’re excited about their work, their products and their mission, and look forward to teaming together to keep delighting customers,” Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon Devices and Services, said in a statement. “And this is just the beginning — we will continue to move quickly and work hard to empower customers with a suite of security solutions that provide an affordable, effective way to secure homes and neighborhoods.”

Ring has actually been working alongside Amazon since 2016 by way of the retail giant’s Alexa Fund. Heralded as an “investment arm” tasked with supporting companies that are developing innovative voice-based technologies, the Alexa Fund helped provide the resources Ring needed to work closely with Alexa APIs and capabilities, as well as develop an Alexa skill that lets customers view camera feeds from the Echo Show and Fire TV.

With this acquisition, the whole ecosystem of Ring devices is now under the broader Amazon umbrella. This includes Ring Video Doorbells, Ring Spotlight Cams, Ring Floodlight Cams, and all Ring Accessories. Don’t worry, though — Amazon has made clear that Ring will continue to operate under its own brand, and that customers should not experience any service interruptions.

Lulu Chang
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer review: A massive, gorgeous dryer with one AI-sized asterisk
The LG SIGNATURE DLEX8900B is a beautiful dryer with a AI brain and plenty of capacity. Just be ready to pay a premium and take over from time-to-time.
LG SIGNATURE DLEX9900S dryer

View at LG

Quick Review

Read more
Fraimic’s E Ink art frame generates art from your voice and looks incredible doing it
Fraimic's AI art canvas is one of the most thoughtfully designed smart frames I've come across.
Indoors, Interior Design, Person

We’ve seen a lot of "smart art frames" at CES over the years. Most of them feel like glorified digital photo frames in turtlenecks. However, there’s one that feels genuinely different: Fraimic, and I say that as someone deeply skeptical of this category.

The pitch appears quite compelling at first. Speak a prompt into the device, and its built-in mic sends the command to OpenAI's GPT Image 2.0, which then generates full-color artwork that lands on a Spectra 6 E Ink display. 

Read more
Google Home’s latest update makes it easier for you to start using automations
With version 4.20, the app will offer pre-built automations you can start using with a tap.
Google Home Automations tab screenshot on gradient background

Google is rolling out a fresh batch of updates to Gemini for Home and the Google Home app, and the headline change is one that could get more users to try out automations. Version 4.20 of the Google Home app adds a handful of pre-built routines to the Automations tab, so instead of building one from scratch, you can pick one and turn it on with a tap.

No more starting from zero

Read more