inurl: This operator is used to search for a specific term within the URL of a webpage.multi html: This could be searching for URLs that contain the term "multi" and possibly relate to HTML.intitle: This operator searches for a term within the title of a webpage.webcam: This term suggests the search is related to webcams.work: This could be looking for something that functions or is operational.Putting it all together, the search query seems to be looking for web pages that have "multi" and possibly "html" in their URL, have "webcam" in their title, and are functional or related to working webcams.
If you're looking for multi-view webcam software or hardware that works, there are several solutions available:
Instead of port 80, use a non-standard port (e.g., 34567). This won't stop a determined scan, but it hides you from casual dorking.
Using Google dorks to find unsecured cameras is not illegal if the cameras are intentionally public. However: inurl multi html intitle webcam work
It looks like you’re trying to locate live webcam pages using a Google search operator.
The search string you gave:
inurl:multi html intitle:webcam work
isn’t quite properly formatted. A corrected version for Google would be: inurl : This operator is used to search
inurl:"multi" intitle:"webcam" "work" html
or more likely, what you meant:
inurl:"multi" inurl:"html" intitle:"webcam" work
But inurl:multi html won’t work correctly because inurl: only takes one term directly after it unless quoted.
"Just because you can access it, doesn't mean you should view it." Putting it all together, the search query seems
If you land on a multi.html page and see a live image of someone’s living room, nursery, or private backyard, close your browser immediately. That is not a "cool find"; it is a crime scene of negligence and a violation of human privacy.
If you saw this quoted as a "good article," it likely means:
multi.html pattern often skips setup/status pagesIf you only need RTSP for a local NVR, turn off the HTTP/HTTPS web server entirely.