The Quigital Legal Sentinel
By Robyn
If your boldest innovation is dodging the law with optics, pivot to a mirror—and ship some ethics instead
Customer Reviews
Corene Quigley
I bought the Quigital Legal Sentinel hoping for peace of mind; instead it amplified risk. On a downtown walk, it falsely labeled an officer as a delivery rider and urged me to proceed. The camera’s constant whir and blinking LEDs drew attention, and a bystander complained about being recorded. Minutes later, I was detained for harassment and unlawful surveillance, and the footage synced to the cloud under my real name. Beyond the sleaze of its purpose, it’s buggy, privacy-hostile, and legally reckless—a liability magnet masquerading as tech
Kamilah Graham
I bought it out of curiosity. It promises to keep tech bros from arrest. It constantly scanned faces, drained battery, and creeped everyone out. On day two, a blaring “law enforcement nearby” alert went off in a quiet café. The noise spooked the room, security called police, and the officers zeroed in on the camera rig. They questioned me for the creepy surveillance, and the app’s cloud sync had already leaked my location and footage. Ethically gross, legally reckless, and technically shoddy. It didn’t protect me; it made me look suspicious