@@notn8dgr832 he could be a script kiddie I heard people sell the credentials of ring cameras online plus most hackers don't spend their time playing video games in fact I'm pursing cyber security and i found I fustating when were doing an amazing project and theirs that kid that just wants to play video games I feel like I'm talking to a loser bumb
they didn't "hack" anything overused statement actually these people were dumb enough to leave their cameras on default login credentials anyone when a web browser and common sense can do this.
Ive met people by doing things like this. Not to this extent, my ways were less invasive, but i made a few friends like that and even taught a few of them about the internet and helped one get into programming
Also if you get a VAC or game ban it stops you from trading inventory items (like skins) for the game you get banned in, so you effectively lose everything regardless.
@@Adrian-py7go yea that's the thing what *if* he had one in his bedroom or bathroom and they didn't show it? This is a very short clip so we can't tell
@@redblue2358 are u stupid. Imagine ur just chillin in your home and you hear some random person start saying “I see you. I see you”. It would probably freak u out.
@@redblue2358 it is a huge deal? It’s a complete evasion of privacy. The security cameras aren’t for some teenaged kid who thinks he’s funny, it’s for safety. That kid was probably scared out of his life. Would you want some stranger watching you in your personal home?
He really handled that well. He made a fake name quickly and pretended like he couldn’t hear what the man was saying as he was walking closer to the camera to shut it off. Smart kid
@@fruitmonkey1292 im a bit paranoid myself. i covered them up and only use when in need. Eventho people gave me strange look when they saw it but i rather hv those looks than constantly being anxious w the thought of someone's watching me 24/7
This is actually quite scary!! Imagine someone hacking your cameras but never saying a word, just watching you day in & day out!! Im happy with my alarm system thank you....
@@savaniplayz7106 lmaoo it’s all good. At least no one fucks with us here because of how ghetto it is. Someone tries to hack our shit, there will be drive by’s and murders lol.
I would be ok with having cameras outside and all but l’ve always felt so uncomfortable with the thought of having cameras indoors. Now I’m certain that I’ll *never* be having indoor cameras
Same. Only ones I'm comfortable with inside (other than a picture camera and a camcorder) are my (and family's) phones and computers. Maybe a security camera that can not be hacked as well (basically it's video is not steamed or uploaded to the internet and would have to be taken out/off of something like an SD card or VHS tape).
@@scj6893 They're basically IP cameras, ones that don't have any login password can literally just be logged on to by anyone. People do this all the time and mess with others, there was one where a baby was in the room and the "hacker" played Thomas the Tank engine remix by Biggie Smalls and the baby started dancing LMAO. There was one where a woman was eating her lunch and she farted and the guy on the cam was like, "Nice one." I watched these years ago so I dunno if it's as popular of a thing as it used to be.
@@captaindesperatehousewife2441 .... just because I donate thousands of dollars to twitch content creators who are seclusively females that only record in a hot-tub, DOES NOT, make me a simp sir.
I'll never have cameras INSIDE my house when I become a homeowner. Not really worried about the hacked cameras; more worried about the invasion of privacy for everyone else in the house.
@@fckmo FYI, I'm not a yo. I'm Mrs., Grandma, and Auntie. Stealing your name? I've been alive long enough to say this was my screen name since the Internet first came out, likely before you were ever born. My name also has a meaning, Leopard Queen.
This is exactly why I don’t believe in putting camera inside the home. I told me cousin it wasn’t a good idea for her kids play room. Literally a month later a man hacked into the cameras and was talking to her 4 year old.
As long as the camera isn't connected to the internet, like every house appliance these days, it's fine. There are camera monitors for infants that doesn't connect to a network, so parents can supervise their sleeping toddlers from another room (i.e. when the mom has to cook in the kitchen and no one is able to watch over the sleeping baby) without the risk of someone hacking the camera.
It has great day vision, the farther away it's a little blurry. ru-vid.comUgkx0jZ_lGlDVJhDnmagEU8gn47cmfPNlLQU Night vision is good but could be better. We are having a hard time figuring out how to set the perfect range. It either seems to pick up and alert every single car that drives down the street, or it only alerts if someone is right in front of the door. Overall, I'm glad we got it.
@@chocoboymlg its among us in english in your culture its amogus because yall first language aint english! so i'm right and should learn englis instead of repeating it
As strange as it may seem, those hackers are (probably unwittingly) doing us a favor by teaching us that it is a really bad idea to have such devices in our homes. Get them out ASAP.
Some people have babies. Others for burglars so they can have different angles of them. And some children just can’t be trusted. Different reasons for protection.
The cameras are the dumbest creation truly. It's quite easy to hack any camera, even the ones in your laptop and computer. Those of us who build them and also know about IP addresses know how easy it is to reverse a camera to see what's going on. This is why all of my computers, cell phones, and tablets have covers over the camera and I have none inside. I also recommend watching Snowden. You'll learn a thing or two about it.
Plot twist: Lamar actually got tired of having cameras in his house and staged the event in order to get rid of them and be able to have fun without being spied on by the parents
I remember years ago a case where a family was being harassed by someone that would mess with their lights, phones, tv, things like that. It took the authorities forever to figure out it was the son on his computer.
@@jestertheslacker Never save Camera password on your chrome browser or phone, just remember it, maybe a password grabber might get access on the passwords, maybe someone can hack your gmail and get all the passwords, Don't use the default password, and always keep your antivirus updated and use a good firewall so nobody can scan your IP for open ports or anything like this so you can avoid bruteforce on Cameras
@@jaredfleming5085 Unless you have a keylogger, or a website you registered got hacked and database is out there, unless someone put a Keylogger or RAT on your computer or a kid accidentaly downloads it trying to get free Vbucks, you can get phished, and a lot more, there are 1000 ways u can get hacked, I've seen and experienced things, not everyone has the knowledge to distinguish a virus
That hacker was such a troll lol “what up homie I still see you” he didn’t sound like he wanted to hurt anyone it just seemed he wanted to be an idiot.
@@exoticoruga No, an idiot. I don't think he actually wanted to harm anyone, depending that he actually knew what csgo was, he sounds kind of young, like prob 19 or 20s.
@Blablabla Um as a matter of fact, I am not slow. I wasn't excusing him for doing this, I'm just saying he doesn't seem like he was doing it to hurt anyone.
Imagine writing a comment where you ask people to imagine what they just saw. There's only one thing sadder and that's asking people to imagine what they just read. FML
@@Ddotkay "hurr durr i hate colloquialisms" yet you used it in the same way in your comment. obviously you're aware of what he actually meant but you want to be pedantic for no reason.
More like try to lure you into something far worse. But sure, let’s go with sarcasm and Minecraft. Because pedophilia and psychopaths are pretty hilarious. I’m glad my kids get up with a mom who was a prosecutor and judge and they know better and can at least recognize risk when it bites them in the face. Definitely the kind of video for jokes🙄
@@cristianchavez1413 there is no "fun" in this. This is intrusion at its finest buddy. "Hackers with no bad intentions" Lol ok pal, clearly you're a child who doesn't see the threat in this situation. Go play minecraft junior.
This isn't a "hacker" this is just some dude logging on to cameras with no passwords and talking through them, people do this all the time to troll people.
That hacker was clearly a young guy messing with people !! but I think about how there might be perverts out there watching people and not talking to them-not letting them know that they can see them😱😰and just watching ..👀it’s so creepy!! These things need to not be inside your home people with children!!!
For if someone breaks in, they have video surveillance as well as proof of faces or what was taken. That's 99.9 percent of the reason. the other 1 percent is over-protective parents wanting to spy on their kids when they're not home.
@@cmethrough9 I mean with how widespread these are most of them are gonna wear masks. But anyways is there any reason to have them indoors vs outdoors? At least if outside its not gonna watch you in your house.
@redtra236 I mean I wouldn't necessarily recommend cameras in the house just because of the hackers that can overtake surveillance footage and be able to spy on you. But I guess depending on position or location of the camera it can come in handy as well for some people. I've seen some footage online of home invasions and I thought the indoor camera came real in handy in that situation.
People using the same passwords for everything* is what is causing this issue. One site gets breached and ALL your accounts are fucked. Your data is sold off & bam! You're hacked! People shouldn't trust IP cameras but there's nothing wrong with a locally hosted one.
I remember my cousin’s husband put up cameras in their home with speakers to prank visitors but one time him, my other cousin, and I were sitting and you hear someone say “Hello? aye” and we sat there thinking it was one of us but honestly it took about 20 minutes of finger pointing to realize someone must’ve hacked it since it was just us and literally he just has access to it and he’s not the type to lie like that. He was so freaked out he got rid of it and got rid of his Alexa. That’s how freaked out he was
what’s really scary is that some people have these, obviously personal in their own home walk around in little to no clothing, because the only people gonna see it is themselves. But then people like this disgusting person exist and I fear for the whole world because of these kinds of people
This hacker is not bad, he looks okay, doesn't sound abusive, only just chatting. A bad one would have asked for money, at least the family know that security system has the opposite of it.
This should be considered on par with breaking and entering and same penalties should apply, if it isn't a law already! Any takers, law makers, globally?🤔
I promise you if I break in your house you’re definitely not going to feel the same way as if I asked you while you we’re eating on a camera what games u play
@@venomgoldenreaper3834 No shit, Sherlock. If it isn't yet a crime, it should be. What's your deal, are you one of these perps, or you're a sicko voyer? You'd probably quickly belt any prick you found spying on your mother or daughter, unless you are that disturbed you sold them the login info!
The kid was really clever for that. He was keeping him distracted whilst he thought of a plan, then he disabled the camera towards the end. If I was in his position I would probably cry and run away
This kid handled it real well. He calmed the attacker and used topics that distracted the guy to disable al the cameras safely. He was taught wonderfully
This is why you buy an actual camera setup with a module that’s only connected within your network and not cloud servers. I have my machine inside the house and it’s wired within my network. It never needs to output or input any public internet traffic. So there’s no way to hack it in the first place. -Software engineer 20 years
or just change your password from something other than password123. something like G6I@2HBD4!P$4#AQ) so that even if ring suffers from a data breach, your hashed password won’t be cracked
The problem with that is if someone breaks in and destroys the storage you have no footage. Personally I see no reason to have cameras indoors at a home
For anyone wondering: There are people who will brute force into ring accounts and will sell them for really cheap. Quite scary knowing some random dude on the internet will pay about $10 to look into your home.
@@teamclimate1345 considering ring accounts need an email and password to be logged in to, and not an ip/port, i do believe that they are able to be brute forced by that. yeah proxy support would help but they use compromised emails and passwords to login. :/
As a former burglar, home security cameras are scary like this one for example it catches you doing anything inside someone's home so I recommend people to remove it asap from your home.
@@solar7295 the dude is just a teenager who wanted a laugh. i guess the older gens cant realize that. i personally wouldnt be bothered, if it were me id find it a bit funny
Unbelievable! He should be jailed ASAP! This is a strong violation of this family's home and they may never feel safe again - especially considering they are the type of people that put camera's inside their house. Lock him up!
@me, um, no. In your comment, you unjustly shift the irresponsibility from the *intruder* to the family. This is their house, and you are just wrong on so many levels to think that they should be more careful.
The guy on the other side sounds around 15 most likely a troll and won’t get arrested.. or he’s not a kid and he’s just a complete weirdo not even to joke around.
@@cloutwolf5665 nobody cares how old he is, if he's capable enough to intrude someone's house, he should also have the capacity to make judgements. He is to he held responsible and punished for his crime.
I always wonder people that have cameras in the inside of their house must be very stupid or very well behave people that would take a chance to be seen by strangers. I don't trust myself to not walk naked from one room to the other or. Something like that.
You thinking way too much into it dude, people with cameras in their homes are only thinking about their safety and protecting their valuables. You must be very stupid to make this comment
I'm really surprised he made himself known & didn't just keep eavesdropping trying to see them in intimate situations. Like, how long has he had access to their cameras? They'll never know.
He prolly not an actual creep stalker. He didn’t know there names and asked him stuff like he didn’t ever know or see it happen. Prolly some weirdo teen thinkin it’s so funny to almost give someone underage a heart attack
you can tell the minute this kid got into their ring network he started talking. it’s extremely boring to just watch people all day and you have to actually be a bit psycho to do that.
The kid now knows what it's like to rent a room in someone's house. My landlord has security cameras everywhere in the house and can tell you when her tenants go to the bathroom, how much cream they use in their coffee and what color underwear they wear when we do our laundry. There should be laws against privacy invasion.
@@shinren_ Closed Circuit cameras, meaning the cameras don't operate on a public network. In order to "hack" these cameras you need to physically be there, and at worst all you can do is turn them off