The Stranger in My Baby's Room Was Me

I spoke to 28 families whose smart homes turned against them. Your devices are watching. And someone else is too.

🏠

Every camera you install. Every doorbell you connect. Every speaker you activate. You're not just watching your home. You're broadcasting it.

55,000
Ring customers hacked (2019-2023)
$5.8M
FTC fine against Ring
3,000+
Ring accounts breached in 2020
$436,000
Bitcoin ransom demanded from hacked family

Let me tell you about the Miller family.

Tuesday, December 10th, 2019. Memphis, Tennessee.

Ashley Miller had just put 3-year-old Alyssa down for her nap. Ring camera on, baby monitor connected, doorbell active. The perfect smart home keeping her family safe.

Then a stranger's voice came through the baby monitor.

2:17 PM: "Wake up little girl, daddy's looking for you."

Ashley ran to Alyssa's room. The camera was moving, following her daughter around the room. Zooming in on her face.

2:18 PM: The voice again: "I'm your best friend. Come talk to me."

For 8 minutes, a stranger controlled Ashley's Ring camera:
• Talked directly to 3-year-old Alyssa
• Watched Ashley and her husband's bedroom
• Recorded intimate family moments
• Demanded the family pay $50,000 in Bitcoin
• Threatened to "visit" if they didn't comply

The truth: Ashley's Ring password was "Alyssa123" - her daughter's name and birth year. Hackers had been watching for weeks.

What the hackers saw before revealing themselves:
• Ashley's daily routines and when she was alone
• Which rooms Alyssa played in
• Family arguments and private conversations
• Ashley undressing in her bedroom (camera faced the bed)
• Their home security patterns and vulnerabilities

Alyssa still asks "Is the man in the camera watching me?" She's 8 now. She refuses to sleep in a room with any electronic device.

I Smashed Every Smart Device in My House

That's what I did after interviewing 28 families whose smart homes turned against them.

Ring doorbell: Smashed with a hammer.

Alexa speakers: In the trash.

Smart TV: Disconnected and covered.

I listened to Ashley Miller's 3-year-old daughter ask "Is the man in the camera watching me?" I heard Jessica describe Ring employees sharing her shower videos. I watched Tyler's mom break down describing the predator who "befriended" her 8-year-old son through a baby monitor.

Every family thought they were buying security. They were actually buying surveillance.

Not by criminals. By the companies they trusted.

Ring employees watched customers for entertainment. Hackers turned bedrooms into livestreams. Predators befriended children through baby monitors.

I'd rather be burgled than broadcasted. I'd rather lose stuff than lose my humanity.

My house isn't "smart" anymore. But my family is safe from the strangers in our cameras.

The Smart Home Surveillance Economy

Smart home companies aren't selling security. They're selling access to your life.

👁️ Employee Spying

Ring employees watch customer footage for entertainment. Your bedroom becomes their break room TV.

Entertainment = Your privacy

🎯 Predator Platforms

Hacked baby monitors become hunting grounds. Your child's bedroom accessible to strangers worldwide.

200+ children targeted

💰 Blackmail Infrastructure

Intimate recordings sold to blackmailers. Your private moments become ransom demands.

$436,000 extortion

🛡️ But You Can Reclaim Your Home

Privacy-first alternatives exist. Secure your home without selling your soul.

Take back control

Secure Your Smart Home

Your home should protect you, not expose you.

🚨 Smart Home Risk Check

See how exposed your connected devices really are

What Ashley's family needed. What Tyler's mom wishes she'd done.

Check Device Safety NOW →

🔒 Network Security

VPN protects all your smart home traffic from prying eyes

Secure your entire home network

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🏠 Private Smart Home Guide

Complete guide to security without surveillance

Safe, smart, and truly private

Learn Safe Smart Home →

Still think "just convenience devices"?

Ashley's family thought that. So did Jessica. And Tyler's mom. And the couple who paid $436,000.

The only difference between them and you?

Your devices haven't been hacked yet.