If you buy yourself a second-hand Nest Cam then you don't really want the previous owner peeking in on your home – but that's a possibility in some cases, according to reports.
The vulnerability comes through a connection to the Wink smart home hub, Wirecutter reports. Based on the experiences of one Nest Cam user and some testing done by the Wirecutter, resetting a Nest Cam doesn't necessarily reset the Wink hub link.
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That means the camera feed can still be accessed through a Wink account even if the Nest Cam has been passed on to someone else. Not really the best scenario for a home security product.
Google has told Business Insider it's aware of the problem and is looking into a fix, though at the moment we don't know how quickly that fix might roll out.
Works with Nest
Various third-party apps and services can connect to Nest Cams using the Works with Nest protocol – which coincidentally Google is retiring in the near future in favor of a Works with Google Assistant program.
The key benefit is that your smart home devices can play together happily even if they're from different manufacturers. That said, you don't want those connections still in place when you sell on your Nest Cam.
For the time being there doesn't seem to be any way to deactivate the Wink connection from the Nest Cam end, so if you've purchased Nest Cams second-hand in the past, the best advice we can give you is to leave them switched off for now.
Hopefully Google and Wink should be able to work out how to cut the link remotely in the near future, and we'll update this article when they do.
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