Is it time to ring the alarm on internet door cameras? (www.theguardian.com)
from jandoenermann@feddit.org to technology@lemmy.world on 10 Feb 2025 20:12
https://feddit.org/post/7831482

#technology

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Telorand@reddthat.com on 10 Feb 2025 20:28 next collapse

Yes. In fact, it’s long past time, and it’s already been done countless times before; nobody seems to be listening. People have been pointing to growing authoritarian States for years, and yet the entire globe seems to be all-in on giving police states another try (or are so privileged they don’t care).

Time to take back your privacy yourself. Hopefully this article will reach some normies who didn’t give it any other thought.

TomSelleck@lemm.ee on 10 Feb 2025 21:05 collapse

I’ve noticed that anyone who has gotten one newly installed can’t stop looking at it for every small thing. It’s like built-in paranoia. Not to mention that every time I take a walk in my neighborhood I’m now on bunch of different people’s cameras without even knowing it.

f4f4f4f4f4f4f4f4@sopuli.xyz on 11 Feb 2025 00:26 next collapse

Yet, somehow Google Glass was reason to beat up its nosy users.

lemming741@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:41 collapse

I did that for about 6 months, mostly to see how good the detection was in frigate (new 0.15.0 release last week, fyi) when I first got it running but the novelty wore off.

I see people in line at the grocery store watching their family watch TV in their living room. That’s creepy to me.

EngineerGaming@feddit.nl on 12 Feb 14:53 collapse
ThePantser@lemmy.world on 10 Feb 2025 20:58 next collapse

I use a POE doorbell camera that is blocked from the Internet.

Rozz@lemmy.sdf.org on 10 Feb 2025 21:11 collapse

I use a hardwired button that makes a bell sound inside my house.

DScratch@sh.itjust.works on 10 Feb 2025 21:28 next collapse

I use a specialised hammer-and-anvil system that produces an audible notification whenever someone use it.

TIN@feddit.uk on 10 Feb 2025 21:51 next collapse

I get stakeholders in the me-visiting community to self-empower their activity through user induced notification media

VitoRobles@lemmy.today on 10 Feb 2025 22:27 collapse

I tie a toy chicken to a wall that when honked, creates an audible sound.

brsrklf@jlai.lu on 11 Feb 2025 10:13 collapse

I have a sign that says “Shout to enter”.

FauxLiving@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 04:16 collapse

I left a flat spot on my door so people can knock

merde@sh.itjust.works on 11 Feb 2025 01:38 next collapse

<img alt="Germany Augsburg Dom-St-Maria Door Handle" src="https://sh.itjust.works/pictrs/image/de3966e6-4059-48f3-b5c9-c07e5e28c829.jpeg">

Olap@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:41 collapse

I’ve got a bell, spring, and pull handle. It’s genuinely amazing

nick@midwest.social on 10 Feb 2025 21:08 next collapse

I use unifi cameras that save to a local nvr which is inaccessible off my network.

[deleted] on 10 Feb 2025 21:22 next collapse

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hydrashok@sh.itjust.works on 10 Feb 2025 21:23 next collapse

Yep. This is the way. G4 Pro is pretty good, too.

noxypaws@pawb.social on 11 Feb 2025 01:21 next collapse

Are there good local backup options? I have some Ubiquiti gear but their camera system seems too locked down

nick@midwest.social on 11 Feb 2025 01:45 next collapse

Hm. I’m not sure.

I know they expose rtsp or rstp or whatever protocol, so maybe you could wire something up to record off the stream.

[deleted] on 11 Feb 2025 02:39 next collapse

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ikidd@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 03:19 collapse

Blue Iris will use pretty Much any cameras including Ubiquiti, has a mobile app for viewing and alerts, and has self hosted AI object recognition using code project. Its entirely off the grid if you want it to be. I know it just saves to folders that you could backup, but it will also do ftp, etc out of the box

MintyAnt@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 12:07 collapse

Been eyeing this. I have older unifi internet equipment, and with a recent wifi radio purchase, I realize one seems to need their cloud key or gateway products now

hydrashok@sh.itjust.works on 11 Feb 2025 16:41 collapse

I think you only need the controller or phone app for setup or config changes. Though it is easier, in my opinion, to just run a controller. You can (at least last time I checked) still self host one if you like. If you’re just doing network config and monitoring, you don’t need much in terms of performance.

TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world on 10 Feb 2025 22:51 next collapse

Some of my neighbors have them and I hate walking down the street. I know it’s a public sidewalk, but hearing all the little pings and “some one is at the front door” it creeps me out. I live in a single party consent state so there’s not like anything I can do but now there’s a database with a record of when I go to/come back from work. I don’t like that. Thankfully, when signing the lease, my landlord forbid in the contact the installation on those. He also owns the houses on either side of mine… a little strip of privacy in a sea of surveillance.

lemmyman@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 00:31 next collapse

Good guy landlord, remember to tip well

blandfordforever@lemm.ee on 11 Feb 2025 03:02 collapse

Gr8 b8

catloaf@lemm.ee on 11 Feb 2025 03:19 next collapse

How close are the front doors? I live in a pretty dense city and I’ve never heard them go off like that.

TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:30 collapse

Some are like six feet away and others are set farther back. It’s not all of the ring came 5 that go off. I know there’s a setting where the user can create a like a bounding box so that they don’t go off unless someone is actually at the door… these folks simply haven’t done that, don’t know to do that, or are watching the sidewalk intentionally. At any rate, my street doesn’t have much traffic so I usually just walk in the road.

agent_nycto@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 13:01 collapse

I don’t think single party technically would cover that. The neighbors would have to be involved in the interaction to give themselves permission to record it.

TrueStoryBob@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:32 collapse

From what I’m given to understand of my state’s laws, this would be covered under the same kind of thing as the surveillance cameras at a convenience store or shopping center parking lot and the expectations a person would have for their privacy… it just sucks.

chemicalwonka@discuss.tchncs.de on 10 Feb 2025 23:24 next collapse

TIL that Ring has a social media platform where neighbors can communicate and share with each other videos/photos that Ring systems collect just like a civilian surveillance dystopia.

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neighbors_(app)

mctoasterson@reddthat.com on 11 Feb 2025 12:58 collapse

90% of it is idiots reporting deer/coyote sightings or falsely reporting fireworks as “gunshots?!?!” at 1:00am. I have literally been woken up by stupid Ring notifications more than by the fireworks themselves.

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 10 Feb 2025 23:45 next collapse

My neighbor’s camera caught someone doing a hit and run on my car, eternally grateful for that!

TheFogan@programming.dev on 11 Feb 2025 01:01 next collapse

Which I agree with… IE I like the system of “your camera catches a hit and run”, you can go knock on their door, ask them to share the footage with you… and you give it to your lawyer, cops or insurance adjusters as you see fit.

What people like me don’t like is the idea that the cops decide to search your permission, use your footage to prosecute a crime you wouldn’t want to. Imagine the same scenerio… except instead of a hit and run… lets say it was say someone delivering pot… or a hispanic person just going home for the day, and ICE was looking for someone to bother, etc…

Point is we’re all happy to be witnesses to crimes that hurt people. but we also know you give cops too much power… and you’ll find horrible things happening

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 01:54 collapse

Well, after we put in our cameras, the cops did come knocking to investigate a shooting across the street.

As I explained to the cops: “The cameras trigger on motion, not sound, and they’re only pointed at our property, not across the street. No records.”

Cops left after that.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 11 Feb 2025 06:31 collapse

Except they can do the same thing without opted into a massive surveillance system that tracks your comings and goings and hands it over to the government to be used against you.

simplejack@lemmy.world on 10 Feb 2025 23:49 next collapse

If you are going to use a cloud camera system, look into the company and make sure that they have proper E2EE.

An NVR is probably the best bet, but if you want a dumb consumer cloud cam, HomeKit Secure cameras like Eve are a reasonable solution. It’s all encrypted in iCloud, which cops still hate, which is a good sign.

Slax@sh.itjust.works on 11 Feb 2025 00:14 collapse

If you’re okay with self hosted take a look at scrypted for HomeKit

4am@lemm.ee on 11 Feb 2025 02:05 next collapse

Or HomeAssistant with Frigate

Clent@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 11 Feb 2025 14:27 collapse

Anything that requires a subscription is a no-go. Especially when it’s running on my hardware.

BowtiesAreCool@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 01:31 next collapse

My favorite part is how cops will break cover or obscure doorbell cams all the time.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 11 Feb 2025 03:03 next collapse

If I don’t control it, I won’t install it.

GhostlyPixel@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 04:33 next collapse

I got a Eufy doorbell cam years ago because you can do local storage, but I think in 2022 or 23 they were called out for not being fully encrypted, iirc it was the thumbnails for push notifications that weren’t being properly encrypted.

And that somehow also turned into a realization that Eufy was using those thumbnails to build a facial database because each face had a unique ID in the metadata.

I should really switch away but haven’t had the money, hopefully soon.

Monument@lemmy.sdf.org on 11 Feb 2025 04:59 next collapse

Same. I went with them as a “good enough” option when I needed cameras because I have had a good experience with Anker products, but they’ve slowly enshitified to the point that I’d drop them in a heartbeat if the budget was there.

michael_palmer@lemmy.sdf.org on 11 Feb 2025 11:25 collapse

I should really switch away but haven’t had the money

Why just not ditch the doorbell camera altogether?

jdeath@lemm.ee on 11 Feb 2025 13:42 next collapse

it’s so funny to see people on lemmy who fell for cloud connected cameras. you’d think this group would be the last to fall for it, maybe not. i’ve even received them as gifts (very expensive ones) but i just threw it in the trash because that is better than anyone using it.

Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:53 next collapse

I do my own onvif cameras but I gifted a ring doorbell to my niece for her apartment. She’s non technical, I can’t support her remotely, and that safety was more important than the loss of privacy of a camera looking out onto a public street.

kent_eh@lemmy.ca on 11 Feb 2025 16:23 collapse

the loss of privacy of a camera looking out onto a public street.

The loss of privacy of a camera that records every face that enters your home and timestamps that data…

blackn1ght@feddit.uk on 11 Feb 2025 14:57 next collapse

i’ve even received them as gifts (very expensive ones) but i just threw it in the trash

Wouldn’t it have been better to tell the gift giver that you’re really happy that they thought if you, but for security/moral reasons you don’t want to install it? At least they could have returned it and got their money back.

Joelk111@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 17:11 next collapse

They also wouldn’t have noticed that they hadn’t installed it. Honesty in the best policy.

jdeath@lemm.ee on 12 Feb 04:22 collapse

not really in that situation

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 12 Feb 2025 03:24 collapse

Recycle or upcycle. Trash is one of the dumbest uses. I understand the total logic it’s just not the best case scenario.

GhostlyPixel@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 15:49 collapse

Because I still think the safety and convenience for my family and I outweighs the privacy impact, it’s a camera pointed at a public street.

kent_eh@lemmy.ca on 11 Feb 2025 16:22 next collapse

it’s a camera pointed at a public street.

It’s a camera pointed at every person who comes to your house.

michael_palmer@lemmy.sdf.org on 12 Feb 2025 02:38 next collapse

Convenience? Ok. But safety? Are door viewers unsafe? <img alt="" src="https://lemmy.sdf.org/pictrs/image/96008755-19e2-4dc9-95ed-d848650959db.png">

muelltonne@feddit.org on 12 Feb 13:35 collapse

Actually - yes, some models are really unsafe. There are “reverse peephole viewers” out there that allow people to, well, view into your apartement. And some models are just screwed together, so a burglar can unscrew them from the outside and then try to push down your handle via the hole.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 19:07 collapse

Very telling that you put convenience on the same level as safety.

[deleted] on 11 Feb 2025 08:14 next collapse

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Septimaeus@infosec.pub on 11 Feb 2025 08:23 next collapse

Everything related to consumer IoT is more expensive and/or difficult to implement as a local-only service.

But that doesn’t make any sense. Why would cloud access make anything cheaper?

Hmmmmm

Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:48 next collapse

As someone who self hosts I understand the economies of scale that would allow it to be much cheaper to make products tied to cloud service. For example my servers for my house could easily support my entire extended family and more.

But of course, that profit isn’t enough, and they all double dip into selling their customers’ privacy.

sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works on 11 Feb 2025 14:57 next collapse

And self hosting can also be cheaper, unless you’re a huge consumer of the service. How many people watch enough Netflix to make the sub cheaper than buying the media instead? We cancelled Disney Plus and bought the few series they like and we’ve already saved money.

Economies of scale are absolutely a thing, but I think there’s a sweet spot where self hosting can be cheaper for a lot of people.

Septimaeus@infosec.pub on 11 Feb 2025 18:20 collapse

I get what you’re saying, but I’m not talking about SaaS products. I’m talking about physical things on local networks that don’t need cloud access.

For example, a common wall switch may use mqtt internally, but inexplicably railroad all commands through the online Tuya platform. The device requires a beefier ESP chip as a result. It must be capable of ethernet and async workflows for client platform auth, token refresh, and so forth. It may even cease functioning when it can’t reach the servers.

By comparison, the strictly intranetwork equivalent has far simpler hardware that can run for months on a watch battery. And yet, the cloud-based product will basically always be cheaper, in spite of being more complex and requiring cloud infrastructure.

So, how come? Yes economies of scale might apply to the hardware manufacturing, but certainly not to the cloud requirement. No economy scales quite like 0.

Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 2025 02:17 collapse

mqtt

Doesn’t mqtt need a broker? (A server?) For me, putting mosquito in a docker or a pi isn’t a problem but that’s not plug and play for a regular person. Because once you introduce a server like that, it needs security patches and becomes a point of failure out of control of the iot vendor. I know I wouldn’t want to take the tech support call when the iot device doesn’t work and have to walk them through debugging a pi.

Septimaeus@infosec.pub on 12 Feb 2025 03:39 collapse

Yes, I only used mqtt because it’s a common low-level protocol in smart appliances that’s comparatively simple. A more accessible example might have been Smart TVs being half the price of dumb ones (if you can even find them now) since the principle is the same.

I agree that support is one of the main things cloud legitimately makes easier. Support personnel have more reliable case data, more robust central control, and so forth.

And I think you’ll agree many smart home folks already have/had hubs and bridges (servers) floating around that obfuscate most of that complexity without the need for always-on WAN access. Remote maintenance (patches, firmware updates, etc) don’t necessarily preclude a plug and play experience.

Whether this accounts for the cost and complexity differential consumers experience can be debated, but my point was simpler. Cloud-based products are artificially subsidized in at least two ways. The first is that they’re a loss leader facilitating platform lock-in, but the second is that rich usage data from intimate user contexts is quite valuable to the endless parade of marketing voyeurs.

Quadhammer@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 14:26 collapse

Yeah I was thinking of doing my own cctv instead of paying someone to have access to my ring cameras. Okay now I need a raspberry pi, new cameras, a server, compatible software and some gumption. Havent got around to it

RaoulDook@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 20:30 collapse

It’s not that hard, and you only need cameras and the raspberry pi.

Pretty much any wifi camera that supports standards like RTSP or ONVIF can be made to work with open source camera stuff on the Pi. Also you can store the videos on the RPi’s storage (USB or SD)

myplacedk@lemmy.world on 14 Feb 05:18 collapse

Great.

1: How do I get an RTSP or ONVIF? Every time I try to buy one, the stuff that is recommended is no longer available, or practically only available in US. (I haven’t checked in months maybe years, but this is where I usually get stuck.)

2: So I get a camera, and I have an rpi or PC-based server with storage. I can see a stream, but that’s just an extra eye. How do I turn this into a surveillance camera, so I get a notification when there’s movement, and an archive of people in the monitored area?

RaoulDook@lemmy.world on 14 Feb 15:16 collapse

  1. To get a camera with RTSP or ONVIF (video stream output) support, you look at the specifications of cameras that are available for sale. Web search engines should be helpful for this pursuit.

  2. To get the surveillance functions of your camera streams (recording, alerts, etc) you install software on the Raspberry Pi that aggregates and records / analyzes the camera feeds. Zoneminder, Shinobi, and Motioneye are some examples of that kind of software.

x00z@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 14:58 next collapse

In the Netherlands the police have a network where people can add their home doorbell spy devices.

It’s horrid and there’s an extreme amount of privacy issues.

So yes, please continue the fight against excessive surveillance.

MrAlternateTape@lemm.ee on 11 Feb 2025 18:20 next collapse

Just the other day, I read an article about how much cases they are able to solve because of the footage. That is a good thing in my opinion.

The police also will ask for the footage, but you don’t have to give it. It’s entirely up to you if you want to do so.

Even so, I prefer not to be filmed at random by people’s door bells, thank you very much.

x00z@lemmy.world on 11 Feb 2025 19:40 collapse

Yes, there’s always some sort of justification towards authoritarianism. The real solution is to fix underlying issues instead. For example, if there is a lot of theft, your social safety net has failed. Punishing people because they react to a problem without fixing the problem is how surveillance- and police states come to be.

We should therefor not fall into spy cameras following our every move. We have to fight them now while they are not too normalized yet. Otherwise, even if underlying problems are fixed, they will still be there, and might get used for far more sinister reasons.

Some good things to understand are the Boiling Frog Syndrome and Ratchet Effect.

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 13:53 collapse

But also these cameras also solve a problem much faster and just seems like common sense whereas trying to fix some abstract core Zeitgeist that may or may not solve the issue isnt much to sink our teeth into. It’s like someone asking you to fix their toilet and you’re like “well what is a toilet and maybe the issue is you don’t earn enough money to pay a plumber” like great, you’re right in one regard, but the toilet is broken and you could fix it

x00z@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 17:35 collapse

Nice banalization.

It would look more like putting a camera in your toilet because “one should be scared of poop diseases”, but then add your toilet cam to a database that every doctor can use to find toilet cams.

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 18:47 collapse

How would a Cam do that?

Maybe like a health department that collects samples at treatment plants to identify the spread of disease. It’s an invasion of privacy. But also doesn’t mean it’s not a benefit to it.

x00z@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 19:45 collapse

It’s an invasion of privacy. But also doesn’t mean it’s not a benefit to it.

Authoritarianism is easily justified. Yet never a good solution.

Pika@sh.itjust.works on 12 Feb 2025 02:12 next collapse

is it a “can” or a “must”? I don’t mind if it’s optional but yea it defo shouldn’t be required

x00z@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 2025 02:20 collapse

It’s optional yes. But they manipulate you with the default scare tactics into registering.

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 13:50 collapse

How sweet would it be if cops did their job though. Like if they actually used the images to arrest the guy breaking into people’s cars at night.

Quadhammer@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 14:20 collapse

But if they can access it they can gain control of it and delete it after they rob your car lol

Melvin_Ferd@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 18:46 collapse

After the cops steal my car?

Quadhammer@lemmy.world on 13 Feb 03:26 collapse

Rob

RangerJosey@lemmy.ml on 12 Feb 2025 02:54 next collapse

It was time a decade ago. And people were. But few people listened.

RubberElectrons@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 2025 03:13 next collapse

It’s been time, dumbass

Aggravationstation@feddit.uk on 12 Feb 06:46 next collapse

I agree with the sentiment of this article and warranted suspicion of connected cameras but its weird that the writer just jumps to food delivery apps part way through and then straight back to doorbell cameras.

Also, what’s this part supposed to mean?

…images that have been forwarded so many times they have the weary sheen of photocopies.

The number of times a digital image is forwarded won’t affect it’s appearance.

ECB@feddit.org on 12 Feb 13:16 next collapse

It depends how you forward images. I assume they are referring to how many/most services (like whatsapp/discord/telegram etc) don’t just send the original file, but do some compression to save data. Do this a bunch of times and you end up with a photo that starts to show noticeable artifacts/pixellation.

That’s my take at least

monotremata@lemmy.ca on 12 Feb 17:47 collapse

imgs.xkcd.com/comics/digital_data.png

Aggravationstation@feddit.uk on 12 Feb 17:57 collapse

There truly is an XKCD for everything

Notyou@sopuli.xyz on 12 Feb 19:31 collapse

Is there an xkcd comic for when people find an xkcd comic for everything?

JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz on 12 Feb 22:41 collapse

thomaspark.co/2017/01/relevant-xkcd/

Notyou@sopuli.xyz on 13 Feb 16:49 collapse

Nice. I feel the cycle is complete.

Freefall@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 14:02 next collapse

With violent criminals running the government, yeah, I kinda do. You can’t trust police body cams to work when they come knocking. Also useful for package thieves and people that deface your anti-nazi sign.

Bosht@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 14:42 next collapse

95 percent of the folks I’ve known literally get them as a ‘oh my Amazon package is here’ device, not for security. Granted security is a bonus, but if you actually wanted security you’d get perimeter cams, not a doorbell with a very limited FoV.

foenkyfjutschah@programming.dev on 12 Feb 18:02 next collapse

it’s a terrible world.

AA5B@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 19:28 collapse

Also for laziness. I’m not answering the door every time someone comes around to sell me solar panels or driveway seal coating, but there are people who I do want to answer for

Plus I suppose there’s “is my dog barking for a reason, or just another dog walking by?”

bitjunkie@lemmy.world on 12 Feb 18:48 collapse

What a stupid fucking headline