It started with a package. Or rather, the absence of one. For Sarah, a graphic designer in Austin, Texas, the final straw was a stolen delivery from her front porch. The next day, she installed a sleek, Wi-Fi-enabled doorbell camera. Within a week, she had added two indoor cameras—one aimed at the back door, another in the living room to watch her dog.
Most consumer systems (Ring, Wyze, Blink) are designed around cloud subscriptions. Every time my motion sensor triggers, a clip is uploaded to Amazon, Google, or a third-party server. Even with end-to-end encryption (which few enable by default), metadata like when I come and go, how often I’m in certain rooms, and even the patterns of my daily life is stored on someone else’s servers. Several brands have admitted to employees accessing customer video clips for “training” or “quality assurance.” That’s a hard boundary for many families.
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