# Tapo camera IP Cameras are a nightmare for our privacy. For this reason I am reverse engineering a Tp-Link Tapo C210's firmware and its relative app in order to prevent them from sending any data to untrusted servers. There are better resources than mine: see https://github.com/nervous-inhuman/tplink-tapo-c200-re and https://drmnsamoliu.github.io/. In particular, I will focus on * the reverse engineering of the app in order to be able to use the camera without a Tp-Link account; * the reverse engineering of the firmware to strip off the portions of code sending the video stream to their servers. ## How these cameras were designed to work 1. You download a proprietary app (Tp-Link Tapo) and create an account without which the camera can not work; 2. You use said app to instruct the camera to use a specified Wi-Fi AP; 3. The camera sends the video stream not end-to-end encrypted to servers we have no control over; 4. You have the possibility to update the camera's firmware through its app. This expands the attack surface for a hacker or from the company itself to push a malicious update. ## What we can do As of today, we have: * Libre NVR solutions (iSpy, ZoneMinder, ...); * A collection of open source software to control these cameras through [undocumented APIs](https://github.com/xfarrow/tapo-camera/tree/main/secret-apis), see [my collection](https://github.com/stars/xfarrow/lists/tapo-cameras). Nonethless, you still need the proprietary app and a Tp-Link account the first time you boot the camera up and NVRs will not stop the camera from sending the video stream to their servers without using a firewall. This repository aims to resolve these issues.