Ignore Motion Detection for events under X seconds

Great simple solution. Voted!

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I think if you are going to implement something like this, you should go ahead and make it configurable. Rain has never triggered my cameras, but bugs are filling my events page. My questions is, Is a second too long? Should tenths of a second be considered? My bugs are crazy fast that trigger my events at night and I think most could be eliminated with a smaller setting.

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This and the suggestion of triggering alerts basing on the size of motion are great idea! I hope we can have both.

If we can also set the upper threshold for the size of motion area (to avoid alerts of car headline, or sudden sun overcast) then it’s even better: the two lower and upper configurable thresholds can be % per field of view area

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Bugs at 1" away from the camera are larger than cars at 20’, so size is relative to distance.

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Voted FOR!
But in addition to this there is already a request to force IR off when in night mode for those of us who have separate IR lighting. That way bugs aren’t attracted to the camera in the first place and it allows people to have a camera inside looking out a window. Double win! Put these two features together and the cams get a lot more uses.

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Vote for it here (be sure to click the VOTE button at the top):

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So what does the motion sensitivity slider setting do? I assumed it would “ignore” smaller/quicker pixel changes to reduce triggers based upon brief, small changes. However, I received many events notices yesterday due to clouds’ shadows yesterday, despite a low sensitivity setting…

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https://support.wyzecam.com/hc/en-us/articles/360015211751-False-Alerts-Pixel-Comparison-Algorithms

Specifically:

There are ways to adjust how likely you are to receive a false alert like this. The first is the motion detection sensitivity slider in your Wyze Cam’s Alert Settings. The slider has a range of 1-100 and will adjust the percentage of changed pixels that are necessary to generate an alert. At the lower sensitivity levels (going toward 1), more pixels will be needed to trigger recording an alert video. At higher sensitivity levels (moving toward 100), fewer pixels have to be changed before an alert video is generated. Please note that this does not mean 1% of the pixels to 100% of the pixels in the image. You can still receive an alert even if you have the sensitivity set to 100 and not all of the pixels have changed. If you have been receiving too many false alerts, turning down the sensitivity should help

.

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my understanding from my work, the Dlink and what ive seen from Wyze is its a % of change, and a % of area change, balanced somehow internal. so either large changes (black to suddenly very light) or large areas (clouds rolling over a sunny field) will set it off. So lower sensitivity means a larger change in either of those 2, higher means a smaller change before its set off. Im not sure how the time domain fits in, for wyze, but i have seen bugs (bright white streaks) that last only 2-3 frames set off the trigger.

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Thanks for the info. I guess I could have searched better…sorry to make you do the work for me :slight_smile:

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Thank you. Actually, I looked it up my self a few days ago, so while it was still fresh in my mind, I knew exactly where to go.

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Yea I think you are correct.
Especially today. It is quite windy here and the trees are creating dancing shadows that all the cameras are going bonkers with. Since these cameras don’t use true motion detection but rather pixel changes, makes it even more important that some sort of pixel detection delay be incorporated into the software as the best solution. Maybe also allowing us the ability to adjust the delay…like we can with the sensitivity settings.

Yes, today wind is pinging my phone constantly with notices. I have 4 cameras outside or pointing out side so sun and wind is wreaking havoc. Today would be a good day to have profiles set for windy sunny conditions. Changing the sensitivity and/or detection zones on four cameras takes time. My events list will be long today.

Snow is a pretty big issue here, especially when the night vision is on, If it’s snowing at night, I am guaranteed to get pretty much constant sd card event recording with little green boxes streaking across the video. I wonder if it would be possible to combine the motion detection with an infrared detector in a future camera and have a setting that only triggers when both sensors detect something. The infrared sensing cameras I have do not trigger on snow, but the sun / shadows sets them off all the time during the day, when the wyze is completely unaffected.

YES! The only issue we have with our setup is that we get an alert from the camera in our garage when the garage door opener’s light turns OFF a few minutes after it closes the door. Voted!!!

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I voted yes - but would definitely like configurable option for more than 1 second (1-5 would work for me).

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Great idea. I live in front of a busy street and at night headlights seem to trigger it a lot.

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I’m not sure this will help much with the headlights. I also live on a busy street and at a corner on top of that. Car headlights sweep my front, side and back yards setting off up to four different cameras. Setting a time delay to ignore headlights is probably going to ignore everything else too. You may end up cancelling all the benefits of motion detection. YMMV

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agree! I installed a separate IR source across the way from my camera, but I still get bugs attracted to the IR lights of the Wyze. An “IR off” feature would be a great solution. In the meantime, I am considering the “tape over” option.

If you do, I’d like to know if the second Ir source draws them away. Someone said they didn’t think it would help and after watching hundreds of flying bugs set off notices, I’m not so sure how much it will help. It’s not like you see moths banging their heads against a light bulb, it’s mostly fly-by’s.