JackOfDiamonds
Well-known member
I want to put a wireless security camera pointed at my water meter so I can check it without having to go down to the end of the driveway and open up the meter. But I am sensitive to privacy and I don't want any of the footage or any of the info at all sent to the internet for any reason.
We all know that the mass-market security cameras send the footage to the "cloud" and we already know that Ring was sharing video footage with law enforcement without notice and without warrant, and besides that, the EULA's often give them the rights to use the footage for "diagnostic purposes", and regardless of the EULA, I don't trust them to follow the EULA anyway and I don't trust the cameras not to get hacked. Plus, when the provider stops providing the cloud infrastructure the camera becomes worthless.
I don't need to be able to view it from anywhere in the world, as long as I can view it while I'm at home. So it can use my home wifi network, or it can use it's own radio signal like a baby monitor, but I don't want it sending any video to the "cloud" or even connecting to any servers (authentication, account, subscription, AI detection, whatever) on the internet.
I looked at all the cameras like Ring, Eufy, Arlo, Blink, and looks like none of them meet the criteria above. There are cheap no-name wireless security cameras that work with an "app", but reviews seem to indicate they also use a cloud service.
It seems really hard to shop for this kind of thing because apparently even cameras that advertise "Local storage" still need to connect to the internet to authenticate, download firmware, create an account, or have a subscription. It's like they make it intentionally difficult to find this information, so the only way to know is buy the camera and try it and then have to return it when it turns out it won't truly work without the internet.
We all know that the mass-market security cameras send the footage to the "cloud" and we already know that Ring was sharing video footage with law enforcement without notice and without warrant, and besides that, the EULA's often give them the rights to use the footage for "diagnostic purposes", and regardless of the EULA, I don't trust them to follow the EULA anyway and I don't trust the cameras not to get hacked. Plus, when the provider stops providing the cloud infrastructure the camera becomes worthless.
I don't need to be able to view it from anywhere in the world, as long as I can view it while I'm at home. So it can use my home wifi network, or it can use it's own radio signal like a baby monitor, but I don't want it sending any video to the "cloud" or even connecting to any servers (authentication, account, subscription, AI detection, whatever) on the internet.
I looked at all the cameras like Ring, Eufy, Arlo, Blink, and looks like none of them meet the criteria above. There are cheap no-name wireless security cameras that work with an "app", but reviews seem to indicate they also use a cloud service.
It seems really hard to shop for this kind of thing because apparently even cameras that advertise "Local storage" still need to connect to the internet to authenticate, download firmware, create an account, or have a subscription. It's like they make it intentionally difficult to find this information, so the only way to know is buy the camera and try it and then have to return it when it turns out it won't truly work without the internet.





