試す - 無料

Are You Being Spied On Through Your SECURITY CAMERAS?

Electronics For You

|

December 2023

Your surveillance camera sees everything. Have you secured these pervasive systems, or are you still unaware of who sees what your camera sees?

Are You Being Spied On Through Your SECURITY CAMERAS?

“There was no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any moment. How often, or on what system, the Thought Police plugged in on any individual wire was guesswork. It was even conceivable that they watched everybody all the time.”

George Orwell painted a grim picture in his dystopian fiction novel 1984, showing us the uncertainty and pervasive nature of video surveillance in the society of 1984. Though a work of fiction, the Orwellian literature mirrors reality as boundaries grow thicker, chips shrink, and codes get longer. While humans may put up security cameras to deter thefts or prevent crime, surveillance inevitably records everything in its vision. Everything! Now, picture all these live visuals accessible to anyone on the internet. Anyone!

Last year, San Francisco brought in a camera ordinance, granting the city police the authority to request access to live footage from privately owned internet cameras to respond to real-time crimes. While the San Francisco police needed permission to access surveillance footage, a quick online search can lead you to Insecam, which streams live footage from around the world, along with approximate coordinates and the camera’s internet protocol (IP) address.

The website had earlier proclaimed its mission was “to show the importance of the security settings,” achieved by eerily broadcasting the live feed of every password-fatigued and unaware victim worldwide. The website has now updated its privacy policy to make the results of only filtered cameras available, and private footage can be removed upon complaint or by setting up a password.

Electronics For You からのその他のストーリー

Electronics For You

Low-power, reliable transmitter chip

Researchers at MIT (United States) have developed a compact transmitter chip that reduces signal errors by a factor of four and extends battery life for IoT devices.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

Leading Suppliers of MICROSCOPES FOR OC OF ELECTRONICS

Who are India's Leading Suppliers of Microscopes for Quality Control of Electronics? Here is the list...

time to read

5 mins

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

Compact swarm-level AI drones navigation using neural network

Researchers at Shanghai Jiao Tong University (Shanghai, China) have developed a compact AI navigation system for drones.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

ML-based wireless power transfer

Researchers at Chiba University (Chiba, Japan) have developed a machine learning-based method to design wireless power transfer (WPT) systems that stay efficient and stable across varying loads.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Wi-Fi that knows who you are

WhoFi, developed at La Sapienza University (Rome, Italy), is a Wi-Fi-based surveillance system that identifies individuals by how their bodies disrupt wireless signals; no cameras, contact, or consent is needed.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

3mm-thick holographic display that delivers lifelike 3D visuals

Stanford researchers (California) have unveiled a 3mm-thick holographic display that delivers lifelike 3D visuals using true holography, not stereoscopy.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

Smart Trolley Robot 'TROLL.E 1.0'

Robots now play a vital role across modern society, often described as human-like due to their growing presence in social and commercial environments.

time to read

3 mins

September 2025

Electronics For You

Compact metal-free thin-film supercapacitor delivers 200V

GDUT (Guangzhou, China )researchers have developed a metal-free thin-film supercapacitor (TFSC) stack that delivers 200V in just 3.8cm³.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

Al-powered self-driving lab tests materials 10x faster

Researchers at NC State (Raleigh, North Carolina) have developed an Al-powered self-driving lab that uses dynamicstate flow and real-time data to test materials 10x faster than traditional labs.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Electronics For You

Electronics For You

Breakthrough in co-packaging photonic and electronic chips

The MIT (United States) FUTUR-IC team has developed a breakthrough chip packaging method that co-integrates electronics and photonics using passive alignment.

time to read

1 min

September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size