They’re affordable and ubiquitous, but homeowners shouldn’t be able to act as vigilantes.

170 points

They don’t recommend them because of what the homeowners can do with them?

I’m much more worried about the fact that they’re a constant feed of activity accessible by anyone who can bypass or be let through Amazon’s access controls.

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44 points

Or shut them down, given the recent debacle with Amazon shutting down someone’s account, disabling their devices in the process.

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16 points
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And here I am with my Eufy cameras…

In fairness is JUST bought the damned things right as all the drama was happening.

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12 points

Saying this as an ethnically Chinese person who is not being racist… I had a eufy robovac and when I discovered it was Chinese-owned and had a video camera installed on it… I immediately got rid of that thing. I don’t trust any technology company owned by China to be able to see into my home.

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8 points

knowing nothing about the Eufy cameras, pros/cons?

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33 points

It allows local hosting; however, thumbnails are sent through an unprotected, cloud based server where they were also cached. It was easily hacked a while ago, when someone figured out the file names, and their patch was to make the file names more obscure so they cannot be guessed.

I bought them a couple of years before the hack, and shit hit the fan. All my cams are external, so the privacy aspect isn’t as high as those with them inside a child’s room or elsewhere inside.

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136 points

Why is Wired writing about wireless cameras? Stay in your area of expertise!

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30 points
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Of course they are against anything that threatens the dominance of wires.

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19 points

Read a publisher called Wired

Look inside

No wires…

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5 points

Tired: wired cameras

Wired: wireless cameras

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4 points

No matter where you go, everybody’s connected.

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78 points
*

But it also allows Ring owners to send videos they’ve captured with their Ring video doorbell cameras and outdoor security cameras to law enforcement. (…) If a crime has been committed, law enforcement should obtain a warrant to access civilian video footage.

This is utter nonsense… Anyone is free to voluntarily provide their own pictures and video to the police. A warrant is so that police can come and take it from you against your will.

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36 points
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That’s great, right up until Ring unilaterally decides to give the police access to your videos without a warrant, or when the police use a warrant to grab video from ALL of your cameras, even if you’ve already complied with their request, and the video is not relevant to their investigation.

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31 points
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That’s great, right up until Ring unilaterally decides to…

Which is a completely different topic than the one I quoted. The article said that equipment owners shouldn’t be able to provide their videos to the police without the police first getting a warrant, which is an utterly ridiculous position to take.

OBVIOUSLY the police should have a warrant to get the video without the equipment owner’s permission, but that’s not what the author said.

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12 points
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Absolutely fair response. I’m sorry that I came across as attacking your point. I just meant to provide another reason why the cameras shouldn’t be recommended, using the context of your quote from the article. I’m sorry that I wasn’t clear about that.

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19 points

Exactly. There are legitimate concerns about whether law enforcement should be able to subpoena “third party” records (including video recordings) with a process less than a full blown warrant supported by probable cause, as determined by a neutral judge, or whether government should be able to compel the retention of records for a later after-the-fact search. That’s a discussion worth having.

But voluntarily recording and retaining video means that the person who controls those records can choose to do what they want with it. Imagine if some homeowner had these cameras, and had their own home burglarized, and tried to turn over the video evidence of the crime, but the courts were like “whoa wait did you get a warrant for that?” It doesn’t really change anything to have it be cloud hosted, or easily shared with a button, because that “share” functionality works for non-police recipients, too. Doorbell camera footage gets shared all the time on social media, sometimes because it’s funny or interesting or otherwise worth viewing.

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57 points

Reading only the headline I assumed “not recommended because of the invasive Amazon tracking”, instead it was “because some owners become vigilantes”…

I am searching also for a camera but I’m not finding it, can someone help me?

What it must be:

  1. Not battery powered

  2. 100% offline

  3. No cloud support at all

  4. No subscription

  5. To replace the door peephole

  6. Onvif support or similar so I can use a generic NVR in my own network for recording

  7. A screen on the inside of the door so I can see who’s outside (because now the door peephole is replaced by the camera)

Seems impossible to find

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31 points

I just grabbef a generic IP camera, connected it over ethernet, and firewalled it so it could not make connections out to my home network or the internet. Turns out it just uses an mpeg stream for the video, so recording it is just a matter of running curl on a server. Any network camera that does not depend on a server should work fine for this type of stuff.

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4 points

Yeah, this. I do the same with my Reolink cameras - block all external access and I use a Frigate docker container to record footage to my storage. Bonus is I have Frigate using a Coral TPU, so it’s got some really accurate, and fast, inferencing/recognition baked in.

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3 points

Could I do this with an RPi 4 B 4GB, I wonder? I’m just About to have mine arrive and I would love to have a couple CCTV cameras in my place.

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4 points

As long as you are just doing capture and aren’t attempting to do anything where a re-encode of the video stream is needed then absolutely. You’ll need something other than a microSD card though to write the video too.

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2 points

Yes, elit does take some messing around to get working though, so I wouldn’t recommend unless you want to spend a bit messing around with configuring a server. (Make sure to back up the pi’s SD card so if it fails you can easily replace it)

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1 point

i’m also thinking to just take a cheap reolink and put over the door - but it would be cooler if there was a screen inside that turns on when someone is detected outside (even by an ultra cheap PIR sensor, don’t need sophisticated AI recognition stuff)

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1 point
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Deleted by creator
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13 points

Sounds like a job for a raspberry pi.

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11 points

I’m looking at Ubiquiti’s UniFi doorbell. It’s not cheap, nor really intended for home installation (it’s more like office grade stuff), but I already use their networking kit and run their software.

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6 points

nice, main drawback is the price (and that’s not in stock in my country)

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4 points

I heard some people on Lemmy talking about foscam for non-cloud cameras. They support onvif. Not sure if they have any in a “door monitor” form factor, though.

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3 points

Look up the brand Intelbras they have a few residential intercoms that might work for you, I don’t know where you are , but i know they exist the US and some parts of Europe and they might be cheaper there since they’re a brazillian company (they’re the best one we have I think?)

I have their regular câmeras and they fit all our criteria. Ours are online, buy ots by choice it’s not a system requirement. At least a few years back a few of those intercoms with screens were compatible with the nvrs i believe.

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1 point

uhm like the wT7 Lite

i searched buy they did not available at all in my European country

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32 points

Besides the privacy aspect of it all, I just know in 5 years they will declare the camera a security problem and shut it off. I want a porch camera that lasts for 20 years.

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7 points

To be fair, they are a security problem.

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