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  • Writer's pictureAltarra Team

Video surveillance that does not compromise privacy

Video surveillance cameras can increase the information capacity of a security system. But many look at this opportunity with suspicion and do not want to install video surveillance cameras in apartments and houses. The reason is the lack of confidence that the cameras won’t threaten privacy or be used by burglars.

Video surveillance that does not compromise privacy

People are afraid of cameras.

Fear and lack of trust are often based on popular fears or on experience with cheap/low-quality devices that do not use strong encryption. But some concerns are real.

Ajax has a solution that will reassure even the most cautious users. The system allows you to turn off surveillance cameras when people are home — or do it automatically using a scenario. Video surveillance is active only when the room needs to be secured without causing disturbance at other times.


Why install surveillance cameras indoors?



Video surveillance cameras are used by entrepreneurs — it helps keeping the business under control and being aware of what is happening in the workplace. Distant branches, large offices, and small stores; warehouses; divisions; and locations of private businesses also need the owner’s supervision.


Cameras help parents know what children are doing while they are away and how a nanny is treating them. You can see how an elderly family member is doing and whether a caregiver is handling the job. You can make sure that pets are okay, and just see the family one extra time.


So, when you need to have the ability to see what is happening at home, in the office, or at the store in real-time, install a video surveillance system.


Sounds like spying. Is this ethical?

Video surveillance is conducted openly and consensually. It is unethical and illegal to secretly observe tenants who rent your apartment. It is normal and correct that family members, household staff, or employees be informed about video surveillance.


Surveillance cameras protect against burglars. Right?

This is an exaggeration. Video surveillance cameras are not a substitute for a security system but, rather, are an additional element of security.

It is also true that cameras can deter intruders. Cameras tell uninvited guests that the room is under surveillance, which means it will be harder to avoid punishment. The appearances of the burglars and the damage done are recorded on video. It is possible that a patrol will be on the site immediately after the break-in, and the burglary will be interrupted as soon as it begins. American study surveyed 422 burglars, and 50% of offenders said that they would discontinue the robbery if they saw surveillance cameras. If surveillance cameras won’t deter the burglar, they will help to reconstruct the picture of the crime.


Psychological comfort of the owners and control of the situation are another arguments for installing video surveillance cameras inside houses and apartments.

How can video surveillance compromise privacy?

  • Break-in

  • Spying

  • Unencrypted data

Surveillance cameras can be hacked. The Guardian reports on dozens of people who sued Amazon-owned Ring after hackers connected to the Ring’s home cameras; woke people up in the middle of the night; threatened, blackmailed, and insulted them; talked to their children; and commented on events in the bedroom or on what was happening on the screen of their living room TV.

In addition to hackers, cameras can be used by burglars.

In 2020, there was the first big study of the privacy risks posed by streaming video. A Chinese-British team of scientists analyzed more than 15.4 million data streams from 211,000 active home IP video surveillance camera users (including Hikvision, Nest, Netgear, and Xiaomi). Scientists confirmed that attackers can spy on a potential victim using home surveillance cameras. Offenders can identify when someone is home, and they don’t need to watch recordings to do this. The reason is that cameras upload unencrypted data, which increases in size when the camera records something moving. In this way, attackers could monitor traffic from home cameras over a long period, and find a pattern. Using this information, they could anticipate when the owner would most likely not be at home.

Despite the risks, surveillance cameras continue to grow in popularity. And here must be solutions that neutralize threats to privacy.


How to protect privacy from surveillance cameras?



Ajax not only allows you to connect cameras and see their streams in an app. The system can control the power supply of cameras, DVRs, and network equipment. In other words, it can strengthen the video surveillance security with a “switch” that blocks operation of this system by the user’s command or by scenario.



 

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