Privacy
This is a camera pointed at your child, so the design rule is blunt: what it sees and hears travels to your other phone across your own wifi, or nowhere at all.
Why it can't leak: there is no server anywhere in this tool. In solo mode everything is computed on the one phone. In two-phone mode the stream is a direct, DTLS-encrypted WebRTC link between your two devices — paired by QR codes, not by a matchmaking backend — so there is still no third computer that ever holds a frame.
The STUN switch: off by default. If you enable "different networks", each phone asks Google's public STUN server for its own address (stun.l.google.com). That request reveals your IP address to that server; it never sees video or audio. Leave it off and no setup byte leaves your network.
Night summary: the event timeline is stored in your browser's localStorage on that phone only, and the clear button deletes it.
Recordings: if you switch on auto-record, clips are written straight to the device you're using. They're never transmitted.
Permissions: the browser asks for camera and microphone; both are used locally and released the moment you stop.
The only network call: one rounded webfont from Google Fonts on first load, then cached, and an anonymous visit tally from the host. No behaviour tracking, no ads, no account, no cookie.
questions? contact · reviewed 6 jul 2026