← Back to context Comment by vorpalhex 2 years ago Why do you assume the NVR is free from hardcoded creds? 6 comments vorpalhex Reply joshstrange 2 years ago Because it’s not listed in the list of affected devices. Also if that’s a concern then don’t expose the NVR. Use something like tailscale or a VPN to access it remotely (or don’t access it remotely). vorpalhex 2 years ago Yeah but now everyone in your wifi range with commonly available hardware has access to your NVR and by extension your cameras.And actually if any of your network machines or devices are breached, the attackers now have NVR/cam access. joshstrange 2 years ago ? My cameras aren't wifi, they are ethernet and the NVR isn't wifi-based either. 3 replies →
joshstrange 2 years ago Because it’s not listed in the list of affected devices. Also if that’s a concern then don’t expose the NVR. Use something like tailscale or a VPN to access it remotely (or don’t access it remotely). vorpalhex 2 years ago Yeah but now everyone in your wifi range with commonly available hardware has access to your NVR and by extension your cameras.And actually if any of your network machines or devices are breached, the attackers now have NVR/cam access. joshstrange 2 years ago ? My cameras aren't wifi, they are ethernet and the NVR isn't wifi-based either. 3 replies →
vorpalhex 2 years ago Yeah but now everyone in your wifi range with commonly available hardware has access to your NVR and by extension your cameras.And actually if any of your network machines or devices are breached, the attackers now have NVR/cam access. joshstrange 2 years ago ? My cameras aren't wifi, they are ethernet and the NVR isn't wifi-based either. 3 replies →
joshstrange 2 years ago ? My cameras aren't wifi, they are ethernet and the NVR isn't wifi-based either. 3 replies →
Because it’s not listed in the list of affected devices. Also if that’s a concern then don’t expose the NVR. Use something like tailscale or a VPN to access it remotely (or don’t access it remotely).
Yeah but now everyone in your wifi range with commonly available hardware has access to your NVR and by extension your cameras.
And actually if any of your network machines or devices are breached, the attackers now have NVR/cam access.
? My cameras aren't wifi, they are ethernet and the NVR isn't wifi-based either.
3 replies →