I notice you've entered what looks like a search query or command fragment:
inurl+viewerframe+mode+motion+my+location+extra+quality
This resembles an attempt to search for webcams or video streams (possibly IP cameras) with specific URL parameters (viewerframe, mode=motion, etc.) combined with terms like “my location” and “extra quality.”
Before you click a single result, you must understand the legal and moral implications. inurl+viewerframe+mode+motion+my+location+extra+quality
Different camera brands use different parameter names:
inurl:viewerframe?mode=motion&resolution=highinurl:viewerframe?stream=full&quality=bestinurl:videostream.cgi?resolution=640x360 (Alternative for Axis cameras)Google has been slowly cracking down on sensitive dorks. In 2020 and 2023, Google updated its algorithms to demote or remove search results that expose webcams and security feeds. However, the inurl: operator remains powerful. I notice you've entered what looks like a
Why? Because Google’s core mission is to index the web. As long as a camera server responds with HTTP 200 OK (success), Google will index the link.
Once you understand the core string, you can modify it for better results. inurl:viewerframe
Search queries like inurl+viewerframe+mode+motion+my+location+extra+quality are often constructed to find web pages whose URLs contain specific terms. This particular combination looks like a targeted search string composed of multiple keywords that might be used to locate pages serving embedded media viewers, map/location tools, or pages with parameters controlling display quality and motion behavior. Below is a concise, practical blog-style explanation of what this query likely means, why someone might use it, and safer/ethical alternatives.
mylocationmylocation=home or mylocation=52.5200,13.4050)my+locationIn URL encoding, a space is often represented by a + or %20. my+location translates to "my location." Why would a camera include this?
Some sophisticated camera systems embed GPS coordinates or a user-defined location name (e.g., "Living Room" or "Back Gate") into the URL parameters. By forcing my+location into the search, you are asking Google to find cameras that have specifically labeled their position or that have a text field containing the phrase "my location."