technology

Amazon is selling creepy hidden spy cameras disguised as boring home accessory


One hidden camera for sale used the picture of a woman hanging a towel on a bathroom hook (Picture: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Amazon is selling one of the creepiest items you will come across this Christmas.

What looks like a very dull home accessory is in-fact concealing a hidden spy camera.

Recording devices have been built into clothes hooks, which at first glance wouldn’t appear to be anything more than something to hang your jacket or towel on.

A quick search on the major online shopping website brings up multiple variations of hidden cameras built into clothes hooks.

Many of the products available are described as being for ‘security, anti-theft and evidence collection’ purposes.

One even says: ‘Hidden in every corner. No matter where it is, it won’t attract attention.’

Just last month, a man was shocked to find a ‘creepy webcam’ nestled into a sofa at an Airbnb.

One hidden camera for sale on Amazon says – ‘Hidden in every corner, no matter where it is, it won’t attract attention’ (Picture: Amazon.co.uk)

Dozens of different spy cameras are still up for sale on Amazon, despite one firm being sued over the gadgets, reports the BBC.

A judge in the US recently ruled that the retail giant will be hauled to court after a woman claimed she was secretly filmed in a bathroom by a clothes hook camera bought on Amazon.

The woman says she was staying at a home in West Virginia as an exchange student when she noticed the host’s motion-activated spy camera in August 2021.

She alleges that she was a child at the time and the man accused of recording her is facing trial. 

Another hidden spy camera says describes it as being for ‘investigation’ (Picture: Amazon.co.uk)

Her complaint to a US District Court says Amazon ‘approved the camera for sale’ and ‘approved the camera’s product description’.

The complaint reads: ‘The description shows the camera serving as a towel hook with the caption: “It won’t attract any attention. A very ordinary hook.”’

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It’s also alleged that the use of the camera was ‘foreseeable to Amazon’ and seeks punitive damages against Amazon Inc, Amazon.com Services LLC and other unnamed defendants.

When Metro.co.uk searched Amazon for a ‘clothes hook camera’, at least five different items fitted with cameras were available.



Hidden spy cameras available on Amazon

When Metro.co.uk searched on Amazon for ‘hidden spy cameras’, here’s just a few items we found:

  • Smoke detector hidden spy camera: The item is described as a 4K home security smoke detector camera with an ‘invisible lens’ with ‘motion detection’ and ‘night vision. It says: ‘It can mount on the wall or ceiling, recording without any attentions, nobody will figure out it is a camera.’
  • Wall clock hidden spy camera: The item says it is for ‘home and office security’. It says: ‘A 2 in 1 wall clock and nanny camera. Clock shape and the lens is hidden in a secret place, it’s also a perfect wall clock, no one will find it’s a video camera and pay attention to it.’
  • Alarm clock hidden spy camera: The item description says: ‘This small hidden camera clock is ingeniously designed to be completely concealed. You can now keep an eye on your home or office without anyone noticing.’
  • USB charger hidden spy camera: The description says the spy USB charger camera ‘looks like a standard USB hub charger’. It says: ‘You can connect multiple charging ports to charge the device at the same time. In addition, the hidden camera will not attract anyone’s attention during the recording process.’

Other items concealing cameras include wall clocks, alarm clocks, USB chargers, smoke alarms and pens.

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According to a privacy expert, the misuse of these types of devices may break British laws. 

Jaya Handa, a privacy partner at law firm Pinsent Masons, told the BBC: ‘Given the expectation of privacy within the home, individuals could be committing a crime under a number of other legal frameworks including harassment, child protection, voyeurism, sexual offences or human rights laws.’

She added that if videos were then broadly shared, there could also be data protection issues.

Earlier this year, the tech giant was forced to pay a £23million settlement for privacy violations over Ring doorbell cameras and Alexa devices.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

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