The Dr. Margaret Show@DrMargaretShow
🚨 Are You Under Surveillance? 👀📡😱
YouTuber Benn Jordan just dropped a bombshell exposé on Flock Safety — the company with over 90,000 cameras deployed across the US.
Many of their Condor AI-powered PTZ cameras (pan, tilt, zoom) are completely exposed online with ZERO passwords, no encryption, and public admin interfaces.
What does this mean? ⬇️
🌟Anyone can watch live feeds or rewind up to 31 days of footage like it’s Netflix. 😳 ⚡️
Stalkers, hackers, or worse — your every move could be on display.
This isn’t theory. It’s happening right now. Full transcript from the video below (cleaned from subtitles) 👇🔥
🌟Full Transcript:🌟
“A few weeks ago, using a commercial search engine I very easily found the administration interfaces for dozens of Flock Safety cameras.
I shared this information with 404 Media and with John Gaines’ help that number quickly grew to nearly 70. None of the data or video footage was encrypted. There were no username or password required. These are all completely public-facing. And some still are.
You don’t have to be an expert to find and gain access to this. You don’t even have to type anything in to see every single person, vehicle and activity that took place at these locations.
In the last 31 days whether you wanted to watch footage live or real time or look at it from a month ago you could just point and click your way like watching Netflix.
You can open up the livestreams or cast them. Making any modification is illegal but I had the ability to track the evidence by simply pressing a button. I could see the paths where all of the evidence files were located on the file system and see their hashes and signatures.
Some devices we saw were familiar-looking Falcon cameras but most of these Condor cameras which are designed to detect and track people.
They’re PTZ cameras meaning Pan, Tilt, Zoom.
And they quite literally use AI to zoom in or follow you around.
In just the time that it took to count and verify these vulnerabilities I saw a family in North Carolina load their infant and bunch of merchandise in a Lowe’s parking lot. And I suppose one could cross reference their license plate with the ParkMobile data breach to find out exactly where the garage is that will store these new fancy tools.
I watched a man leave his house in the morning in New York. I watched a woman jogging alone on a forest trail in Georgia. This trail had multiple cameras. Could watch a man rollerblade then take a break to watch rollerblading videos on his phone.
How? Because the camera’s AI automatically zoomed in on it just like it zoomed in on a couple arguing at a street market in Atlanta.
So what, they’re still anonymous right? No they are not.
Within two minutes of open source intelligence using a commercial facial recognition engine I found out that one of them just finished medical school and the other is dealing with chronic irritable bowel syndrome.
The couple also had a baby last year and they have a pretty concerning debt to income ratio. I also know that they drove over 45 minutes from their address in the suburbs to attend church in Atlanta that morning and then they checked out this market and bought a sweater.
I watched a law enforcement officer and ambulance escort a man having a mental health crisis in Iowa. I know this because the Cedar Rapids Police Department maintains a public database of every single emergency call in the city as well as daily arrest reports with individuals names, addresses, ages, genders.
Listen, I know that I’m being creepy right now. Just saying these words out loud nauseates me but I’m trying to show you just a fraction of the information that anyone in the world with access to a commercial search engine has had regarding anyone who attended this market or walked on this trail in the last 31 days. And it gets worse.