Recommend Cloud-Based Video Recording Services.

DustyRusty

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Equipment
2020 BX23S, BX2822 Snowblower, Curtis Deluxe Cab,
Nov 8, 2015
6,237
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North East CT
I have decided that the time has come to put security cameras around my home and have them send recordings to the cloud. I am open to all suggestions for this and beyond. I am not housing anything of particular value beyond my own life and that of my wife, so I don't want to break the bank to accomplish this. I see our home as a very low risk of being broken into, just want to be able to keep an eye on the place when I am not at home.
 

ShootinBlanks

Member

Equipment
B2601
Oct 16, 2023
26
52
13
Maryland
I installed eufy cameras all around the outside of our house and a good view of the shop. They work great and no monthly subscription. They are connected to our WiFi so I can check on things on my phone no matter where I am. A little pricey but well worth the piece of mind.
 

Daferris

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Equipment
LX2610
Nov 23, 2021
483
403
63
Mid-Michigan
I use Ubiquiti stuff since 2016 for both my network and security. Top notch equipment at a fair price. If your somewhat tech savvy you can install and manage everything yourself. Or if you want there are a number of vendors that will either configure and then let you run the day to day or offer turn key service and manage and support it for you.
The network allows me to lock down my Wi-Fi to ensure no one but who I allow to login. They have many different cameras to pick from. I have mine set so they email me when they detect motion. I also have one setup to read license plate number of any car/truck that comes up the drive. Everything is hosted locally on my equipment with cloud access thru Ubiquiti at no cost per month. You only have to buy the hardware. The only service fee would be if you have a vendor manage your installation.
At a minimum you would need a Cloud Key Gen 2 Plus $199.00
And a camera for example the G5 Bullet $129.00
Extras would be a network switch, more cameras, access points for Wi-Fi if you want to also run the internet off the cloud key. A gateway for a firewall. The Cloud key can also support key card door access VOIP phones as well. You just need to add the hardware for them.
A couple of vendors that I have found useful content on their YouTube channels are...
 
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imnukensc

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BX2380
Sep 10, 2015
687
590
93
Midlands of SC
Blink here for several years. Home wifi. No subscription fees for me, but they may require that now. Don't know about the others mentioned. I also looked into Arlo and almost went with those/that, but the Blink wireless cameras had a much longer battery life. Pretty easy set up.
 

Vince1230

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Bx2370
May 13, 2022
153
73
28
Honey Grove,Pa
Personally not a fan of cloud based services. This allows other companies access to my content. I would rather look at Arlo with hub to do local storage. May be more expensive with start up but no ongoing fees . Also not content in universe
 
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JimDeL

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BX2380; R4 tires; 54" MMM; FEL w Pirahna bar; Ballast Box; BXpanded skid plate.
Aug 31, 2022
295
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Austintown, Ohio
Personally not a fan of cloud based services. This allows other companies access to my content. I would rather look at Arlo with hub to do local storage. May be more expensive with start up but no ongoing fees . Also not content in universe
I have the Arlo system with a 64 ghz thumb drive plugged into the base. The thumb drive will store six (or more) months of captured videos that are easily viewed on the computer.
 
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xrocketengineer

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BX1880, FEL, Grapple, 36 in. Forks, 48in. MMM, Quick Spade, Ripper
Nov 14, 2020
749
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Merritt Island, Florida
As always, I am cheapskate. I have been using Foscam cameras over the years since 2015 because of the price and flexibility. You can start with one camera and set it up with your cell phone for basic use in about 10 minutes using your own WiFi.
You can buy one camera at a time and set it up whichever way you want with their VMS software. You can just setup the camera to send notifications to the cell phone and emails with three pictures when there is motion detected. You can add an SD card to the camera and have video recording of the motion events that can be replayed on the cell phone and on the VMS software on the computer. I use my router with an SD card to act like an FTP server to record videos.
Besides that, you can use a network video recorder for full time recording or pay for their cloud service. This is what my setup look like on the VMS software:
Foscam Cameras.jpg
 

North Idaho Wolfman

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Sandpoint, ID
Reolink, 4k or 8k with DVR, it will do all three, Cloud backup, local recording, and remote control and viewing.
 
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wp6529

Active member

Equipment
B7100DT
Oct 31, 2023
152
97
28
TX
I use Ubiquiti stuff since 2016 for both my network and security. Top notch equipment at a fair price. If your somewhat tech savvy you can install and manage everything yourself. Or if you want there are a number of vendors that will either configure and then let you run the day to day or offer turn key service and manage and support it for you.
The network allows me to lock down my Wi-Fi to ensure no one but who I allow to login. They have many different cameras to pick from. I have mine set so they email me when they detect motion. I also have one setup to read license plate number of any car/truck that comes up the drive. Everything is hosted locally on my equipment with cloud access thru Ubiquiti at no cost per month. You only have to buy the hardware. The only service fee would be if you have a vendor manage your installation.
At a minimum you would need a Cloud Key Gen 2 Plus $199.00
And a camera for example the G5 Bullet $129.00
Extras would be a network switch, more cameras, access points for Wi-Fi if you want to also run the internet off the cloud key. A gateway for a firewall. The Cloud key can also support key card door access VOIP phones as well. You just need to add the hardware for them.
A couple of vendors that I have found useful content on their YouTube channels are...
Another vote for Ubiquiti gear. I use their stuff for my network core and wifi APs for years. I use Alibi cameras, but I've worked on some Ubiquiti camera setups and they are good.

I'm definitely not a cloud fan, but I'd trust Ubiquity for security and not data mining over any of the big consumer hyped stuff and certainly over the likes of anything connected to Google.
 

The Evil Twin

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L2501, LA526,
Jul 19, 2022
2,814
2,825
113
Virginia
Personally not a fan of cloud based services. This allows other companies access to my content. I would rather look at Arlo with hub to do local storage. May be more expensive with start up but no ongoing fees . Also not content in universe
Not with the proper encryption. Sure, a cheap hosted service for Chicom cameras might not be secure. Most of them are video encrypted end to end and also while stored. The chances of your local network or device getting hacked are significantly greater than gaining access to your cloud content. Otherwise, all the major companies in the world wouldn't store their data there.
FWIW, when you do hear about a data breach involving a major company, the access was gained on a local level and NOT through the cloud.
 
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GreensvilleJay

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BX23-S,57 A-C D-14,58 A-C D-14, 57 A-C D-14,tiller,cults,Millcreek 25G spreader,
Apr 2, 2019
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Greensville,Ontario,Canada
If you're going to store YOUR data on anyone else's computer 'cloud', YOU need to encrypt it BEFORE sending it there and rename the files(at least the extensions) . It'll add another 'layer' the hackers have to overcome. It's simple and easy to do.
 

mikester

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M59 TLB
Oct 21, 2017
3,547
2,006
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Canada
www.divergentstuff.ca
Reolink, 4k or 8k with DVR, it will do all three, Cloud backup, local recording, and remote control and viewing.
I recently picked up one of their 4K wifi PTZ cameras - pretty decent video and still images. Motion detection is better than other similar priced cheap cameras with less false positives. I don't allow my cameras any internet access.

Remember - IOT stands for Internet Of insecure Things.
 
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GreensvilleJay

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BX23-S,57 A-C D-14,58 A-C D-14, 57 A-C D-14,tiller,cults,Millcreek 25G spreader,
Apr 2, 2019
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Greensville,Ontario,Canada
no, I mean the DATA in the file you send is encrypted and STORED in the 'cloud' as 'garbage' when someone opens it up, unlike sending say a filename.TXT where the data is stored in readable ASCII.
 

The Evil Twin

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L2501, LA526,
Jul 19, 2022
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Virginia
That is, essentially, the standard these days. AES 256 encryption and SSL TLS are safe ways to do this. Even the host (where it is stored) can't decipher the data as long as the user does not choose an easily guessable key.
AES-256 is considered incrackable by itself. Even most implementations are considered safe. (no side-channels).
OTR protocol uses AES-128 (weaker than AES-256) as symmetric encryption algorithm and the world's best funded intelligence agency that doesn't exist (NSA) couldn't break it.
Really, it comes down to the question of the context of AES-256.
If you use weak keys (which are easy to guess), it's crackable quite soon. Most implementations use very strong keys, which are as safe as AES itself.
 

Vince1230

Active member

Equipment
Bx2370
May 13, 2022
153
73
28
Honey Grove,Pa

GreensvilleJay

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BX23-S,57 A-C D-14,58 A-C D-14, 57 A-C D-14,tiller,cults,Millcreek 25G spreader,
Apr 2, 2019
11,402
4,900
113
Greensville,Ontario,Canada
ET, are you saying that the actual databytes in the file you send into the 'cloud' is stored on that server in an encrypted file ? If so I assume YOU choose the 'key' before you send the file up 'there' ??