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>Verkada, a Silicon Valley security startup that provides cloud-based security camera services, has suffered a major security breach. Hackers gained access to over 150,000 of the company’s cameras, including cameras in Tesla factories and warehouses, Cloudflare offices, Equinox gyms, hospitals, jails, schools, police stations, and Verkada’s own offices.

>The list of clients that use Verkada is broad: in addition to companies like Tesla and Cloudflare, the group gained access to Verkada cameras inside Halifax Health, a Florida hospital; Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut; Madison County Jail in Huntsville, Alabama; and Wadley Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Texarkana, Texas. In addition to the camera footage, the group also says that it was able to access the full list of Verkada’s thousands of customers and its private financial information.

Verkada is closely held startup, , and certainly has a large reach for a company founded in 2016. .

I have the nagging suspicion it's an alphabet agency front to get facial recognition surveillance into private premises.

>>Verkada, a Silicon Valley security startup that provides cloud-based security camera services, has suffered a major security breach. Hackers gained access to over 150,000 of the company’s cameras, including cameras in Tesla factories and warehouses, Cloudflare offices, Equinox gyms, hospitals, jails, schools, police stations, and Verkada’s own offices. >>The list of clients that use Verkada is broad: in addition to companies like Tesla and Cloudflare, the group gained access to Verkada cameras inside Halifax Health, a Florida hospital; Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut; Madison County Jail in Huntsville, Alabama; and Wadley Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Texarkana, Texas. In addition to the camera footage, the group also says that it was able to access the full list of Verkada’s thousands of customers and its private financial information. [via The Verge](https://www.theverge.com/2021/3/9/22322122/verkada-hack-150000-security-cameras-tesla-factory-cloudflare-jails-hospitals) Verkada is closely held startup, [valued around 1.6 billion](https://techcrunch.com/2020/01/29/verkada-security/), and certainly has a large reach for a company founded in 2016. [Forbes was full of praise for the technology and innovative solution but of course mewed about a lack of diversity](https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2019/04/25/this-startup-making-security-camera-systems-for-schools-reached-a-540-million-valuation-in-3-years/?sh=6b98afe6d54a). I have the nagging suspicion it's an alphabet agency front to get facial recognition surveillance into private premises.

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[–] 1 pt

That's my entire point. If you're mounting and wiring power for cameras already, putting in your own NVR is not difficult at all. And if you're having someone else do that, they should have the ability to setup a local NVR for you as well. I have a few clients that I've installed surveillance systems for, and I always tell them to avoid the cloud shit. And once I have it all set up, they can still view their cameras on their phone just as easily as they would if it was "in the cloud."