His own QR code.
A second later, his buzzed. It wasn’t a message from his wife or his coding group. It was from a bot he’d never added: @HomeGuard_Bot . "Camera 'Front_Door' online. Live stream: [Link]. Motion alerts active." Arjun frowned. He hadn't configured any Telegram integration. Curious, he tapped the link. There, in stunning 1080p, was his own living room. He waved. The camera panned to follow him. It worked perfectly. Ip Camera Qr Telegram
His Telegram buzzed one final time: "QR Code Scanned. Pairing new owner. Goodbye, Arjun." The live feed cut to black. The camera went offline. And in the silence of his dark apartment, Arjun realized he hadn’t bought a security camera. He’d bought a $25 keyhole for someone else, and the setup QR code was never meant for his phone—it was the master key for the person who built the backdoor first. His own QR code
Then, one night at 2:17 AM, his Telegram buzzed again. "Motion Detected: Front_Door. Unknown face. Confidence: 98%." Arjun, half-asleep, opened the stream. The night vision was on. A figure stood perfectly still in his hallway, facing the camera. The face was pixelated, but what chilled Arjun was the posture: the figure wasn’t looking around for valuables. It was looking directly at the lens. And it was holding up a phone, the glow illuminating a square barcode on the screen. It was from a bot he’d never added: @HomeGuard_Bot
Before he could react, the camera motors whirred. He wasn't controlling them. The lens tilted down… to focus on the keyboard of his laptop, which was sitting on the coffee table. He watched in helpless horror as the live view zoomed in, sharpening on the screen where his password manager was still open.