Amazon will pay $1 million if you film aliens with a Ring Doorbell camera
Your Amazon call camera could capture evidence of extraterrestrial life and make you a lot of money. If you capture an alien creature on your Ring camera, the technology company is ready to pay you $1 million for it. The publication told in more detail Gizmodo.
The scheme is called Ring's Million Dollar Search for Extraterrestrials. Participants are encouraged to keep an eye out for any signs of alien life captured by Ring doorbell cameras. If the camera catches a small green creature, the winner who presents the best “scientific evidence” will receive $1 million.
The competition will be judged by meteorologist and astrobiologist Jacob Hakk Misrad. Those who don't believe in filming aliens can still enter the competition to win a $500 Amazon gift card by filming their own Alien Ring movie using makeup, props and costumes. Applications for participation in the competition are accepted until November 3.
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“Sensors detect unwanted signals. Perhaps it's nothing. Or maybe something. This is where you come to the rescue,” says Amazon’s website. To qualify for a cash prize, participants must upload the footage to the Ring app.
UFOs and aliens in general have become the subject of intense attention around the world for some reason. In September, journalist and UFO researcher Jaime Maussan presented to the Mexican Congress two mummified bodies that he claimed were of non-human origin.
The two bodies, placed in huge coffins, were found in Peru and analyzed by the National Autonomous University of Mexico using carbon dating. And NASA has named a director of UFO research after completing a nearly year-long investigation into unidentified aerial phenomena, or UAP.
Ring, meanwhile, may be using the UFO hysteria as an attempt to reassure customers that it is not a privacy nightmare.
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Earlier it became known that Ring transferred a whole day of video recordings without the user’s consent.
The client had previously complied with law enforcement's request to obtain his doorbell records as part of an investigation into his neighbor, but the same law enforcement agencies used the court system to obtain even more. In many major cities, law enforcement officers have access to a special portal through which they can request recordings made using the Ring gadget, which is part of a vast network of devices.
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