Port Forwarding to Camera for Neighbor to View?

DLONG2

Known around here
May 17, 2017
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Sorry to ask such a basic question. I acquired an Amcrest Pro HD 3M-954#W camera for my Blue Iris, and it has its own IP address. I am trying to allow it to be a web cam for my neighbor to view. When I go into the LinkSys WRT1900AC router, and add a port forward, the port is never opened according to GRC.com (their "Shields Up!" port probe feature). Is there a basic tutorial available on how to get ports opened so that a camera can be viewed by a neighbor?

Update: I logged into the camera and saw the Networking settings, where specific ports are listed. Before, I was just picking a random port to use. Now when I place in the TCP and UDP ports into the router for forwarding, the TCP is open while the UDP is stealth. I still cannot get a view of the camera via the internet.

Update2: I figured it out. Within the Amcrest IP web interface, I went to Networking / Connections, and changed the HTTP port to a different port from 80, and added the new HTTP port in the router to forward to the camera's IP.

Next Problem: Now that I have the port-forwarding done, and I can access the AmCrest camera from the internet, now the local access does not work. As soon as I had changed the HTTP away from 80 in the Amcrest setting and saved to a new port number, it said 'Don't close this browser' but after a short while the browser said the connection was lost. Now I cannot access the internal IP address. The Blue Iris still can locate and show the camera, probably because of the RTSP setting being intact. I can connect to the camera from the internet with both the admin and the user accounts, but is there a way to reconnect internally to the Amcrest web settings page?
 
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You will have to use the new port when accessing from local. Example: If the camera's IP address is 192.168.1.120 you will need to add the new port to the end of the IP. Such as 192.168.1.120:55 the 55 being the new port number.

Second, forwarding ports is a very bad idea. Read this and consider using VPN instead: VPN Primer for Noobs

And this: Resource Guide on IP Technology for all Noobs
 
Better to create an account in Blue Iris that can only view that one camera, and give your neighbor access to that.

Don't expose a camera directly online. Too many well-known backdoors and other security problems.
 
You will have to use the new port when accessing from local. Example: If the camera's IP address is 192.168.1.120 you will need to add the new port to the end of the IP. Such as 192.168.1.120:55 the 55 being the new port number. . . .

Thanks for the advice and the links.
 
Better to create an account in Blue Iris that can only view that one camera, and give your neighbor access to that.

Don't expose a camera directly online. Too many well-known backdoors and other security problems.

Many thanks, bp!