Social Media Platform SpiedLife Allows 24/7 Access To Your Home Via Webcam

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A new platform allows you to be the star of your own reality television show “Big Brother”-style by live-streaming your life every day.

platform spiedlife access to home via webcam
Photo by Kampus Production

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The latest social media platform called SpiedLife allows an audience to have access to a streamer’s life every single day as long as webcams are installed in every part of their home. SpiedLife allows the streamer to communicate with their audience via chatrooms, track their analytics, and receive money as well. According to Oddity Central, the platform currently brings in 10 million viewers per month as of last year, said casting director Mario Sacco.

“We continue to attract an audience from around the world, including over 10 million views per month. The first platform of its kind, SpiedLife opens the door to experimenting with new customs and cultures by showing real-life around the world with just a few simple restrictions… compliance with local laws and not to show nudity and sex.”

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Some people use the platform to promote their businesses while average users have installed cameras in their homes to see if viewers would be interested in their everyday lives. However, most of the streamers are based in Italy since the platform was launched by the Italian-based company Visioray. Visioray also launched the company Skyline Webcams, a network that shows HD webcams of different locations around the world similar to other platforms such as Earth Cam. Other SpiedLife users are also based in the Philippines, Ukraine, Russia, and several other countries.

Some people have confessed to using the platform but as noted by Oddity Central, Digital Central forum users expressed concern about the idea of children being possibly exploited on the platform.

“I usually use Skyline webcams, and despite being a paid and registered subscriber I saw this site being promoted down by the comments so decided to take a peak at what it was. The first few cameras were of restaurants and stuff, which is free advertising in a way. Then I started to delve deeper and found cameras which were of living rooms, bedrooms and other things with people, including children, in them. Now fair enough, there was nothing sordid going that I could see, but this is disturbing. I think people are being lured in by the hopes of being the next big reality show, but are people who enter the area where the cam covers consenting and/or aware.”

Another user also said, “Anyone who films their children for public consumption is an idiot of the highest order and in an ideal world, social services would step in. I look at the amount of family Youtube channels where parents make video after video of/with their children without a care in the world and just shake my head. How this is legal when children can’t make an informed decision to consent to being filmed, I can’t really understand.”

It is unclear if the platform will become the next big thing in the United States.

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