Below is a concise, complete article that explains what this search-like query likely represents, how it’s used, why someone might use it, potential security and privacy implications, and best-practice guidance for responsible usage.
inurl: Operatorinurl: is a Google search operator (also supported by Bing and other search engines) that restricts results to pages where the following term appears inside the URL string itself. This bypasses page titles, meta descriptions, and body content to find structural patterns in web addresses.
Add X-Robots-Tag: noindex, nofollow to HTTP headers for all camera interface pages. This tells search engines not to cache or index those URLs. inurl multicameraframe mode motion top
Microsoft Internet Explorer was once the standard for security cameras. Systems that required ActiveX controls often used multicameraframe as a container page, with mode=motion to trigger the applet that highlighted moving objects.
inurl:
A Google search operator to find URLs containing the following words. Here it implies someone is looking for exposed admin panels, documentation, or API references. inurl: A Google search operator to find URLs
multicameraframe
Likely refers to a layout or grid view showing multiple camera feeds simultaneously within a single frame/browser window.
mode motion
Indicates the system is either in “motion detection mode” or a mode where motion-triggered events are displayed. multicameraframe Likely refers to a layout or grid
top
Could refer to a “top bar” menu, a “top” alignment in the UI, or perhaps a sorting/filter (e.g., “top motion events”).