A million baby monitors and security cameras were easily viewable by hackers

https://platform.theverge.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2026/05/meari-baby-monitor-2.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&crop=3.4407124681934%2C0%2C93.118575063613%2C100&w=1200

A baby’s eyes peer directly into the camera lens. A kid with a striped shirt looks up, then away. A boy in a policeman’s costume, a gold star on his chest. A messy bedroom that reminds me of my own daughters, with an unmade bunk bed, a little girl’s hat and headband, and Hello Kitty plastered on the wall.

One thought repeats in my mind: I shouldn’t be seeing this. No stranger should.

But bad actors could’ve easily spied on all these locations — and a million more — because many of Meari Technology’s Wi-Fi baby monitors and security cameras were absurdly insecure. If you had access to one of those cameras, you theoretically had access to them all.

Meari is a Chinese white-label brand whose cameras ship under hundreds of different names. Many are generic-sounding Amazon sellers like Arenti, Anran, Boifun, and ieGeek. But financial records show one...

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Sources: Russian hackers were behind a 2025 ransomware attack on Jaguar Land Rover that used “mind-blowing” encryption and cost UK's economy an estimated $2.5B

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