SpyAlert – Find Hidden Cameras Before They Find You Checking into a hotel, vacation rental, office, or guest room? Before you unpack… scan the network. SpyAlert helps you discover cameras connected to the same Wi-Fi or wired network you’re using—so you know what (and who) might be watching. How it works 1. Connect to Wi-Fi - Join the hotel, rental, office, or home network like you normally would. 2. Run a SpyAlert Scan - SpyAlert looks for: - Network cameras (IP cameras, baby monitors, nanny cams, doorbell cams, etc.) - Attached cameras hiding behind generic device names 3. Review Possible Cameras - For each suspicious device, SpyAlert shows: - Device name & type (when available) - Network address information - Helpful hints so you can decide what needs a closer look 4. Take Action - Armed with details, you can: - Ask your host or property manager for an explanation - Confirm whether a camera is disclosed and properly placed - Decide if you’re comfortable staying—or need to escalate When to use SpyAlert - Hotels & motels – Quickly scan the room network for unexpected cameras. - Vacation rentals & Airbnbs – Double-check that cameras are only where they’re supposed to be (like exterior doors). - Guest rooms / in-laws / roommates – Make sure your “private space” is actually private. - Home & office networks – See just how many cameras are watching your doors, driveway, nursery, or workspace. Why SpyAlert? - Peace of mind in unfamiliar places - Network-based detection – focuses on devices connected to your network - Clear, human-readable results – no dense network jargon - Conversation starter – real data you can bring to your host, manager, or building owner Important Notes SpyAlert focuses on network-connected cameras and devices visible on the network you’re using. It cannot guarantee detection of every possible camera, especially those that are: - Fully offline - On a completely separate, hidden, or isolated network - Hard-wired to recording equipment with no network access Instead, SpyAlert gives you a powerful first pass—a practical way to see what’s talking on the network and whether that looks like a camera.