
"I watched a man leave his house in the morning in New York," Jordan says in his video."
"I watched a woman jogging alone on a forest trail in Georgia. This trail had multiple cameras, and I could watch a man rollerblade and then take a break to watch rollerblading videos on his phone. How? Because the camera's AI automatically zoomed in on it - just like it zoomed in on a couple arguing at a street market in Atlanta."
More than 60 livestreams from Flock AI-powered surveillance cameras were publicly accessible on the web without requiring usernames or passwords. The exposed feeds connected to Condor cameras capable of panning, tilting, zooming, and automatically tracking people and vehicles. Security researchers located the streams and administrator control panels via the Shodan search engine. Access permitted viewing live feeds, downloading 30 days of archived video, changing camera settings, deleting footage, viewing log files, and running diagnostics. Some exposed cameras captured activity near homes, trails, and public markets. Flock deployments often scan license plates and the company integrates with law enforcement and Ring for footage requests.
Read at The Verge
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