Open accessibility guideSkip to sections navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerAdvertisementNationalAn Australian dashcam company may be putting customers’ privacy at risk by broadcasting their location and live camera feed to the world.Updated June 22, 2026 — 7:29pm,first published 7:25pmLoadingLatest in VideosVideo icon0:32Kennedy scorches to 100m titleVideo icon3:20Queensland treasurer reveals record health spendVideo icon2:43AFL legend out of intensive care after accidentVideo icon2:02Wanted man James Dalamangas will not be extraditedAdvertisementTwitterFacebookInstagramRSSOur SitesThe AgeThe Sydney Morning HeraldBrisbane TimesWAtodayThe Australian Financial Reviewnine.com.auDriveClassifiedsTributesPlace your adThe AgeContact & supportAdvertise with usNewslettersAccessibility guideSitemapPhoto salesPurchase front pagesContent licensingWork with usTerms of usePrivacy policyPress CouncilCharter of Editorial IndependenceAI Editorial GuidelinesProducts & ServicesSubscription packagesMy accountSubscriber FAQsDelivery statusToday’s PaperGood Food GuideDaily PuzzlesCopyright © 2026Subscribe
Australian dashcam company could be putting customers’ privacy at risk
An Australian dashcam company may be putting customers’ privacy at risk by broadcasting their location and live camera feed to the world.
Australian dashcam maker broadcasts customers' location and live feeds globally. IoT privacy failures trigger regulatory scrutiny and buyer demand for compliance-first architectures; enterprises must audit edge device vendors in fleet/vehicle monitoring stacks.









