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  • Have you ever wondered if you're being watched?

  • Nothing looks out of place.

  • It's a feeling that's creeping in for more travelers, as stories

  • of hidden cameras, in hotel rooms, house rentals, cruise ships,

  • even airplane bathrooms, continue to make headlines.

  • Spycams were once the stuff  of international espionage

  • with secret agents given cameras  resembling pocket watches,

  • matchbooks, even tubes of lipstick.

  • In the movieMeet the Parents,” Robert DeNiro's character Jack Byrnes hides cameras

  • in a stuffed animal and picture frame

  • What's this look like to you?

  • Um, this looks like a teddy bear.

  • Smile, you're on nanny camera.

  • Which seems feasible because  he's a retired CIA agent

  • Now, anyone can buy these itemseither in stores or online.

  • But how hard is it to find these cameras?

  • And do devices designed to locate  hidden cameras really work?

  • We're going to find out.

  • That got me suspicious.

  • We asked a Singapore tech company, OMG Solutionsto hide cameras in three rooms in this house.

  • Then we sent in my colleagueVictor, to see how many he could find

  • Wow, this looks like any other room.

  • First with the naked eye, and then with the help  of four different types of camera detectors.

  • Here's what we uncovered.

  • First, Victor went room-to-room,  

  • closely examining the master bedroominspecting bunkbeds in a child's room.

  • What clues should I look for?

  • And scrutinizing household  items in the home office.

  • He spent a lot of time at the  book case, and walked away.

  • I know that there are hidden cameras, but I can't  seem to locate them. It is really disconcerting.

  • So far, he said he's found nothing suspicious.

  • Yeah.

  • After 20 minutes of searching, he found  one camera located inside a working clock.

  • Wait, alarm clock? Is the time correct? So this alarm clock, the time is wrong.

  • Where is the lens? Oh! Oh! I found one! Oh my god, I saw it!

  • The time was wrong, which tipped him off.

  • He found one!

  • At the six o'clock, you can see it! Oh my god, it's... not bad.

  • But what gave it away was the time. I found one, yes! But it's so well camouflaged.

  • But Victor wasn't pleased with this resultfeeling he probably missed a spycam or two.

  • But what he doesn't know is that he missed  26 out of 27 hidden cameras in the house.

  • This didn't surprise Pieter Tjia, founder of OMG Solutions.

  • He's touching the camera, but he might  not be able to tell that it's a camera.

  • He said in the past three years, cameras  have become smaller and harder to see,  

  • often hidden in everyday objects, such as  calculators, diffusers, and water bottles.

  • Like a pinhole camera, it's  embedded into the object.

  • But it wasn't always this way.

  • When video cameras hit the  mass market in the 1980s,  

  • they were designed to rest  on the operator's shoulder.

  • Later models could be operated with just one hand.

  • Today, most people carry video  cameras with them most of the time.

  • But while spycams are much smallerthey're just as easy to buy and operate.

  • Back at the house, we asked Victor to  download a popular app called Fing,  

  • which scans Wi-Fi networks for cameras.

  • Searching hidden cameras, I can see...

  • The app, what it does isit details whether or not 

  • something is connected to the wireless network.

  • It says that there are 22 active  devices but found no cameras.

  • None of the cameras are connected.

  • And the app doesn't like tell me  exactly where and what to look out for.

  • I don't know where are theyit's not solving my problem.

  • He also used his phone's flashlight to  search, a common tip suggested online.

  • Anything here? Oh wait!

  • Wait... Is this a hidden camera? Now I'm paranoid.

  • I mean, the fact of the matter is,  

  • to find these cameras you would have to  pick up every single object in the room.

  • I don't see anything here...

  • Inspect it

  • Yep, correct, correct.

  • Every angle, and then even still, you may miss it.

  • This search, aided by the flashlight, located  another three cameras, in a Wi-Fi repeater

  • Sound bar... nothing. Wi-fi repeater, nothing...

  • Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. There's a camera over here.

  • I thought this was a Wi-fi repeater, but it's not. I see a camera over here. Found it.

  • A button on a shirt.

  • Oh wait, I found one. I was looking  at this hanger next to the mirror,  

  • as I made my way down to the buttons, it  suddenly occurred to me that I've seen a  

  • movie where a hidden camera  was embedded in the button.

  • So I was looking at the first  button, second button, third button!

  • Then that's where it gave it away, the button  is different from the rest of the buttons.

  • Ladies and gentlemen, this is a 4K camerawhich has a livestreaming function.

  • If you're not observant, you  would not have noticed it.

  • And a teddy bear, the last  one Victor noticed because  

  • of the unusual grammar on the bear's shirt.

  • Wait, there's something in the bear.

  • The bear has this badge that says, “With happiness, every time and pleasure”.

  • So it's not grammatically correct.

  • There's a hole in the eye?! Oh, there's the camera!

  • So I found 3 cameras so far... 1, 2, 3. Cool.

  • With Victor's frustration rising,  

  • it was time to turn to hand-held devices  designed to locate hidden cameras.

  • This is a radio frequency detector. It beeps when it's close to a camera.

  • But it only works if a camera is  turned on and connected to Wi-Fi,  

  • which means it won't find cameras  that use SD cards to store data.

  • It's also prone to false alarms.

  • It's almost like you're  distracted with that sound.

  • Yes.

  • Yeah, he's gonna be annoyed with this one.

  • There's a lot of false alarms, which is  actually making my job harder than it should be.

  • This device also has a built-in lens detector,  

  • but the beeping proved so distracting, Victor  didn't locate a single camera with this device.

  • Victor: You need to constantly tune it  to the right frequency to pick it up.

  • The area which has no camera at allyou can hear this [device] beeping.

  • You see?!

  • The technology in these cameras has  become increasingly user-friendly,  

  • but this is not the only reason for  the growing number of spycam cases.

  • But unlike the peeping Toms of the pastthese voyeurs stand to make a profit.

  • A man in China, who secretly  recorded women in hotel rooms,  

  • sold the videos to a porn site for $28 each.

  • In total, he pocketed $85,000  before he was arrested in 2018,  

  • and later sentenced to 11 years in prison.

  • In 2019, 300 spycams recorded more than 100,000 videos of hotel guests

  • in Jining, China, which voyeurs paid between 100 to 300 Chinese yuan to access.

  • That same year, police in SeoulSouth Korea arrested two men for  

  • livestreaming videos of 1,600 people  hidden in 30 hotels across 10 cities.

  • The pair streamed the videos to a website  that charged monthly subscriptions.

  • But there's another way criminals  extract money from these videos,  

  • by extorting the people they record.

  • In 2018, a woman sued a Hampton Inn  in Albany, New York when videos of  

  • her showering were posted on porn sites  and sent to her friends and colleagues.

  • The perpetrator, thought to be a hotel employee,  

  • published the videos online after she failed  to send him money and additional videos.

  • Similar extortion plots have been uncovered in  India, Vietnam, Malaysia and the Philippines.

  • With just two more tests to go, we give Victor a basic lens detector.

  • These are cheap, portable and easy to use. When the device finds a lens, a red dot lights up.

  • Oh wait, I found. Wait... There you go, the  3-hour mark. It's quite obvious actually.

  • The problem? You must be close to the camera to find it.

  • Oh yes, so you need to be very close.

  • You said to him he needs to get up closebut now he's realizing just how close.

  • How close, yes you're right.

  • When you're traveling, you're already exhausted.

  • The last thing you want to do is spend one hour

  • scrutinizing every nook and cranny just to locate a camera.

  • Despite its popularity on social media, Victor  only found two cameras with this device.

  • In our final search, we gave Victor another  lens detector, this one much more advanced.

  • If you see the red dot [and] when you move  down, you don't see the red dot anymore,  

  • when you put [the device] back up and  see the red dot, then that's the lens.

  • Oh wow!

  • With this detector, Victor found 11 more  cameras, in this tissue box, this bag,  

  • and a tiny pinhole camera buried  between these files on the floor.

  • 12?! And I only found 1 camera, 2 cameras. And I was so proud of myself.

  • In total, Victor found 17 out of 27 cameras.

  • There's a camera in this storage box.

  • Not a bad result, but not a great one either.

  • Okay, it blended in very well and you  never suspected this one, the speaker.

  • Yes, the speaker is the camera.

  • Okay.

  • Social media posts about hidden cameras have  increased nearly 400% in the past two years,  

  • according to the data company Sprout Social,  

  • with countless articles dedicated to findingquick and easy solution to this growing problem.

  • But there isn't one, at least not yet.

  • And while devices to detect cameras are advancing

  • so are the cameras that are being  hidden, sometimes in plain sight.

Have you ever wondered if you're being watched?

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