Smart Doorbell Privacy — PIPA and Strata Are Both In Play in BC
Claim: A video doorbell in BC faces two overlapping privacy frameworks: BC’s PIPA (which applies to strata corporations operating cameras on common property, not to individual homeowners in personal capacity) and the practical strata-bylaw/neighbour-relations constraint on what the camera can record. Both point the same direction: aim narrow, limit to your own doorstep.
Mechanism
Who PIPA applies to:
BC’s Personal Information Protection Act (PIPA) governs how organizations (including strata corporations, businesses, and strata management companies) collect personal information — including video images.1 PIPA does not apply to individuals acting in a personal (residential) capacity.1 So:
- A strata corporation installing a camera in the lobby → governed by PIPA; must have a notice, a purpose, and a data management policy.
- An individual owner operating a Ring doorbell on their own front door → not subject to PIPA in a strict legal sense, but still subject to the bylaw approval requirement and to reasonable-expectation-of-privacy norms.
What “not subject to PIPA” does not mean:
Even where PIPA does not technically apply to the individual homeowner, recording neighbours, their comings and goings, or their guests in a common corridor can:
- Give neighbours grounds for a complaint to the strata council (which then has authority to require removal or angle adjustment)
- Give strata council grounds to refuse or rescind approval for a camera that captures more than the owner’s entrance
- In an extreme case, support a nuisance claim if recording causes the “discomfort not tolerated by the ordinary occupier” standard to be met (cited in BC CRT cases)2
The practical rule — aim narrow:
Both the PIPA compliance standard (for stratas) and the reasonable-expectation-of-privacy principle (for individual owners) converge on the same instruction:
- A doorbell camera should capture only the activity directly at your unit’s entrance — not the neighbouring unit’s door, not the full corridor, not the building foyer beyond your doorstep.
- Most Ring and Nest doorbells have a privacy zone / motion zone feature that digitally masks areas you designate. Configuring this to exclude adjacent doors and corridors is both the privacy-compliant posture and the practical way to reduce nuisance complaints.3
Account-side privacy (data leaving your home):
A separate privacy surface is the cloud: Ring and Nest store recorded video on their servers, accessible to the company and potentially to law enforcement via legal request. Ring publishes a transparency report on government data requests.4 Key mitigations:
- Enable end-to-end encryption (Ring: supported on most models; Nest: not available — Google retains decryption access)
- Review and disable Neighbors/Community data-sharing features if you do not want footage shared within the Ring neighborhood network
- Use a strong, unique password + 2FA on your account to prevent the most common access vector (credential stuffing from unrelated breaches)4
Conditions (when this matters most)
- Strata buildings where the front door is common property — the privacy analysis intersects directly with the bylaw approval analysis (see Strata-Doorbell-Camera-Needs-Written-Council-Approval-in-BC (Home Systems))
- Buildings with dense unit layouts where one unit’s door is directly across from another — narrow field of view is critical
- Anyone sharing video outside the app (posting on social media, providing to police) — that sharing is a new “collection” event that may implicate PIPA even for individuals in some interpretations
Scope (what this does NOT cover)
- Criminal interception of private communications (a separate, stricter federal standard under the Criminal Code — generally doorbell cameras aimed at a front door do not implicate this)
- PIPEDA (the federal private-sector privacy law) — PIPA is BC’s provincial equivalent; they overlap but BC PIPA is the governing law here
- The strata corporation’s own obligations when operating a shared camera system — that is a separate, higher-standard compliance question
Idea Compass
North: Where this comes from
- BC PIPA (Personal Information Protection Act, SBC 2003, c. 63) — the governing provincial privacy statute
- doorbell (Home Systems) — the parent component note
East: Tensions
- Strata-Doorbell-Camera-Needs-Written-Council-Approval-in-BC (Home Systems) — the bylaw approval tension: privacy compliance is a condition strata can impose, not a replacement for the approval requirement
- Cloud data sharing — Ring’s Neighbors feature and law enforcement request pipeline are designed-in data sharing that most users do not actively configure off
South: Where this leads
- Privacy zone configuration in the Ring or Google Home app — the tangible action
- security-cameras (Home Systems) — the broader camera privacy framework this doorbell sits within
West: What’s similar
- smart-devices (Home Systems) — the same cloud data and account-security considerations apply to any smart home device that records or transmits data
Sources
Footnotes
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BC Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner (OIPC) — A Guide to BC’s PIPA: PIPA applies to organizations, not individuals acting in personal/domestic capacity — https://www.oipc.bc.ca/guidance-documents/1438 ↩ ↩2
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Field Law — BC CRT cases on strata doorbell cameras; recording common corridor described as potentially unreasonable interference with use and enjoyment — https://www.fieldlaw.com/insights/publication/Ding-Dong-Your-Doorbell-Camera-Must-Come-Down ↩
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StaySafe Vancouver — privacy zone/motion zone best practices for BC strata doorbell cameras; OIPC guidance on limiting capture to unit entrance — https://www.staysafevancouver.com/post/strata-doorbell-camera-bc-privacy-law ↩
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Consumer Reports — Ring privacy and security: 2FA mandate after credential-stuffing attacks; end-to-end encryption; law enforcement transparency report; Neighbors data sharing controls — https://www.consumerreports.org/electronics-computers/privacy/ring-privacy-security-settings-to-check-a7189415320/ ↩ ↩2