
"You may be worrying about limitations, but the supported feature list is impressive, including video and audio streaming, two-way communication, local and remote access, multiple streams, pan-tilt-zoom controls, and both detection and privacy zones. There's also support for continuous or event-based recording, either locally or to the cloud. What it won't handle is how that storage is managed, meaning some camera manufacturers will still require you to use their cloud-based subscription models."
"Pleasingly, there are no limitations on resolution, unlike Apple HomeKit Secure Video, or restrictions on AI detection features. Matter is using WebRTC technology, with remote access handled via the STUN and TURN protocols, meaning that manufacturers can choose to implement end-to-end encryption for footage. TCP transport support is designed to allow more efficient and reliable transmission of lots of data, like video cameras produce, which should reduce the load on your Wi‑Fi and the impact on camera battery life."
Matter 1.5 introduces native support for a wide range of cameras including indoor and outdoor security cameras, video doorbells, baby monitors, and pet cameras. The release enables video and audio streaming, two-way communication, multiple streams, pan-tilt-zoom controls, detection and privacy zones, and both continuous and event-based recording locally or to the cloud. Resolution and AI detection capabilities are unrestricted. Matter relies on WebRTC with STUN and TURN for remote access and offers TCP transport for efficient video transmission, allowing manufacturers to implement end-to-end encryption. Major platform providers have not yet announced camera adoption plans.
Read at WIRED
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