How criminals could be spying on you inside your own home through household gadgets linked to the internet - including your TV, baby monitor and even your KETTLE
Midday on an industrial estate in North Yorkshire and a van pulls up outside a furniture-making company to be loaded up ready for a delivery.
Meanwhile, 250 miles away in London, workers check the till and stock the shelves at a high-end shop selling cigars and whisky. At much the same time, children emerge from a school in the Midlands, ambling through the playground as they move between lessons.
They may all be mundane, everyday activities, but that makes it all the more chilling. Because these three scenes were recorded on private security cameras at those locations in England, only to end up being streamed, live, via a website in Russia that anyone, anywhere in the world, can access at the click of a button. Around the clock, day and night.
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