HACKER Q&A
📣 dopamean

Home security cameras that don't have terrible data policies


I just bought a house and everyone keeps telling me to get a Ring camera but I have some major issues with it that I probably don't need to get into here.

I've been looking into the Unifi cameras from ubiquiti but I've heard mixed things. I'm looking to set up a couple cameras outside my home (front door and back door). One feature of the Ring camera that is really nice is that it can recognize people and alert you when a person is at your door. Are there any other camera options that have features like this?

I'm open to hacking something together if need be. It doesn't need to be a completely out of the box solution.

Thanks.


  👤 davismwfl Accepted Answer ✓
I have a number of cameras on my property (12 and counting), I use cheap cameras from China and put them on a separate lan that is blocked from sending data outside of the network and can't be accessed from outside the lan either. Then I have a blueiris server running on my main lan (I use a ubiquity edge router) where I have the rest of the machines. The BlueIris server has access to the camera lan to get the data off it, and lets me see the cameras wherever I am. I have a mix of cameras but mostly the S3VC cameras you can get off Amazon, they are inexpensive and are decent quality. This lets me feel relatively safe, but still use the inexpensive cameras without spending a ton.

As for doorbell camera specifically. I had setup a Pi with facial recognition which you can find as packages online. It is fairly easy to setup and works pretty well, but I dropped it in the end and just put up good quality door camera attached to the blueiris server. You can set alerts on the BI server to tell you when someone is at the door, pretty easy to setup and minimize false triggers.


👤 runjake
I just bought a few Annke 4k cameras, which afaict are rebranded Hikvision, and set up a Blue Iris box.

The cameras are on an isolated VLAN with no access out. Last I checked, they weren't trying to phone home.

The cameras are cheap, durable, and have excellent day and night vision.


👤 skinner927
I know you said you didn’t like ring, but sometimes it’s worth paying for the convenience of not having to maintain. Most of us spend all day working, the last thing I want to do is start debugging my security system. It’s similar to how mechanics always have broken cars or housekeepers have a dirty home.

👤 giantg2
Is anyone not using Blue Iris? I was hoping to find a freeware solution. Also, is the $70 for Blue Iris a one time payment or annual?

👤 frou_dh
Cameras certified under Apple's "HomeKit Secure Video" are probably good in terms of data policies. Don't know how they compete in terms of features.