![]() But again, to each its own, and its the individual person decision. The way that people make this work with AT is they remove the security encryption of the PWD for LAN cameras (inside your own local IP network) and then embed the username and password as plain text in the URL to the camera and add it as a media tile. That being said, i would also gladly pay an additional 1 time fee for a "Premium Feature". I completely understand the problematic of developing a "feature", that's why i never pushed while gladly paid for a license for AT. Especially where i have indoor cameras all over the place. and if i can avoid putting my password in plain text i will do so. People will call me "crazy" "overkill" tell me "But its ur LAN". Thats correct as well, i will never shut down what BI (Blue Iris) calls "Secure only" for LAN and NON LAN (basically encrypting the password vs plain text). 443 SSL via stunnel both LAN and NON LAN for all of my cameras (16 total).Ģ. There are apps out there from whom we could pay for resources but it would be a significant investment. I dunno maybe crowdfunding this initiative might be an option. But use of a Blue Iris or other NVR with similar capabilities (and thus a dedicated transcoding PC, etc., etc.), is pretty rare and takes a big commitment on the part of such households. If a significant portion of our Customers used Blue Iris, we'd have special incentive for further research. ![]() There are significant hurdles to add any within-page authentication in ActionTiles to embedded sources. I guess it's best to have multiple layers of security but at the same time, security of the LAN (via strong WiFi encryption and router firewalling and VPN protection for any access from the Internet), quite a formidable "first moat".
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |