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Home and Wildfire Safety Combined: Ring's Watch Duty Partnership and What It Means

Ring's community features are getting fire watch notifications to help you stay aware of more than just crime.

Headshot of Tyler Lacoma
Headshot of Tyler Lacoma
Tyler Lacoma Editor / Home Security and Smart Home
Tyler has worked on, lived with and tested all types of smart home and security technology for over a dozen years, explaining the latest features, privacy tricks, and top recommendations. With degrees in Business Management, Literature and Technical Writing, Tyler takes every opportunity to play with the latest AI technology, push smart devices to their limits and occasionally throw cameras off his roof, all to find the best devices to trust in your life. He always checks with the renters (and pets) in his life to see what smart products can work for everyone, in every living situation. Living in beautiful Bend, Oregon gives Tyler plenty of opportunities to test the latest tech in every kind of weather and temperature. But when not at work, he can be found hiking the trails, trying out a new food recipe for his loved ones, keeping up on his favorite reading, or gaming with good friends.
Expertise Smart home | Smart security | Home tech | Energy savings | A/V
Tyler Lacoma
2 min read
Watch Duty app showing California fires.

Watch Duty's fire update prowess is meeting Ring's community apps.

Watch Duty

Last year saw Ring partner with Kidde for indoor fire alarm and smoke detector systems. Now the security is doing something similar for outdoor fires, thanks to new compatibility with the nonprofit app Watch Duty.

If you live in any area threatened by wildfires in the past several years (like I do), you're probably familiar with Watch Duty, which has become one of the best free ways to get updates on all local fires, including both alerts and maps. Now those features are arriving on the Ring platform.

Ring customers will be able to receive updates through the new Fire Watch section, which is set up in Neighbors, the more community-focused part of Ring's app and online portal. Neighbors already lets people share real-time, map-based updates on local events, including police activity, lost pets and burglars captured on cam. Now it's expanding into reliable wildfire updates.

The new fire features arriving in Ring's apps

Ring's Neighbor's app showing a map.

Soon, Ring's Neighbors app will have Watch Duty updates based on location.

Ring

Watch Duty will fuel this new fire section in several different ways. First, Watch Duty's real-time apps regarding nearby wildfires will pass along into alerts in the Ring/Neighbors apps, so your phone will pop up a notification even if you don't use Watch Duty.

Second, if you subscribe to Ring Protect for your Ring security cameras, if there's an ongoing fire alert in your area, your Ring camera system will also jump into action. Ring's online AI will start analyzing any recently saved videos for signs of fire, like smoke or flames, and then send an alert to customers so they know something may be wrong.

Participants can also share snapshots from Ring cameras manually if they see signs of fire. Those photos will be passed along to Watch Duty and could be used by first responders when organizing their fire control plans.

This new partnership isn't quite up and running yet, but Ring customers can expect Fire Watch to start rolling out this spring. This kind of partnership clearly has potential, although recruiting Ring cameras to watch for fires may have some privacy senses tingling. For now, it looks like Ring allows you to opt in or out of such sharing practices as you see fit.Â