You will see a list of IP addresses and domains. Each result will have a URL similar to:
http://123.45.67.89:8080/cgi-bin/viewerframe?mode=motion&my+location=home&extra=high
Common Observations:
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. inurl+viewerframe+mode+motion+my+location+extra+quality
"Smart Motion & Location Quality Check" (or “MotionQL”)
A smart home owner runs the tool on their local network. It finds an old IP camera responding to
http://192.168.1.101/viewerframe?mode=motion&my location=home&extra=timestamp&quality=high.
The tool warns: “Motion mode active, location ‘home’ exposed in URL, extra metadata visible. Change authentication and remove location from query parameters.” You will see a list of IP addresses and domains
Before you click a single result, you must understand the legal and moral implications.
Why does this search even work? The answer lies in the "Internet of Things" (IoT) security disaster. A smart home owner runs the tool on their local network
If you find your camera using such a search: