Your smart camera is spying on you if you do not change the password now

Published on May 16, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The convenience of monitoring your home from your phone comes at a price: your privacy. Experts warn that thousands of smart cameras and monitors are vulnerable due to default or weak passwords. Anyone with basic knowledge can access your live feed, seeing every corner of your house without you knowing. It's time to act. 🔒

A dark close-up of a security camera with a glowing human eye in the lens, surrounded by lines of code and a broken chain symbolizing vulnerability due to weak passwords.

Technical flaws that expose your private life 🛡️

Many devices use outdated security protocols like RTSP without authentication or open ports by default. Outdated firmware accumulates known vulnerabilities that attackers exploit with automated scripts. A recent study notes that 30% of analyzed cameras still use keys like admin or 1234. The technical solution involves updating the software, disabling UPnP, and using unique passwords with two-factor authentication.

The neighbor no longer needs to peek through your window 👁️

Before, to spy on someone you had to climb a wall or use binoculars. Now, just by searching Google for passwordless IP camera, you can see a stranger's breakfast live. It's almost easier than ordering dinner. If you don't want to be the unwilling star of a reality show, change that factory key. Your privacy shouldn't be the main course of a hacker's dinner.