July 2026 guide. A useful security record is more than a dramatic clip. Preserve the original video, the time and time zone, nearby sensor events, who handled each file, and a short factual incident note. Export early because rolling cloud or local storage may overwrite the event.
If there is an immediate threat, contact emergency services first. Follow instructions from the responding agency or insurer; evidence requirements vary by location and incident.
First 15 minutes: protect people, then protect the record
- Move to safety and call emergency services when needed.
- Do not confront, follow, or publicly identify a person from a camera clip.
- Write down the exact local time, time zone, address, and device that alerted.
- Export the original event and the minutes before and after it.
- Save nearby door, window, lock, alarm, and motion events.
- Keep an untouched copy before trimming, enhancing, or sharing anything.
Security evidence checklist
| Record | What to capture | Common loss |
|---|---|---|
| Camera video | Original clip, pre-roll, post-roll, camera name, export format | Rolling storage overwrites the event |
| Sensor timeline | Door, window, motion, glass, smoke, leak, and alarm events | App history expires or account access changes |
| Access activity | Lock user/code label, unlock method, failed attempts, temporary-code window | Codes are deleted before the log is saved |
| Incident notes | What was observed, by whom, when, and what action followed | Memory changes after repeated discussion |
| File handling | Original filename, export time, copies, recipients, and case/reference number | Edited files replace the original |
Export video without losing context
Use the camera or security app’s native export when available. Include enough time before and after the visible event to show entry, direction, vehicles, packages, lighting changes, and other context. Keep the original resolution and audio. If the app offers only a share link, ask how long the link lasts and whether a downloadable file is available.
Do not crop, annotate, brighten, or recompress the only copy. Make a working duplicate for viewing or sharing and leave the original unchanged.
Preserve the event timeline
Camera time can differ from alarm, lock, phone, or router time. Record each system’s displayed time and time zone rather than silently “correcting” it. Export or screenshot the surrounding timeline: arming, disarming, entry delay, door opening, motion, lock use, alarm verification, calls, and restoration.
Write a factual incident note
- Date, local time, time zone, and exact location.
- Who first received the alert and on which device.
- What the person directly saw or heard, without guessing intent or identity.
- Which camera, sensor, lock, or alarm generated each record.
- Who was contacted and any report, claim, or case reference.
- When files were exported, copied, or shared.
Keep originals and working copies separate
Create a read-only original folder and a separate working folder. Use clear filenames such as 2026-07-19_2143_AEST_patio-camera_original.mp4. Do not put access codes, recovery keys, or private household details in a filename. Back up the originals to a second location that the same failed phone, recorder, or account cannot erase.
Privacy and sharing rules
Share the minimum needed with the relevant authority, insurer, property manager, or affected person. Avoid posting faces, license plates, neighboring homes, children, access routines, or interior layouts to public groups. The security camera privacy guide covers placement and household access.
Prepare before an incident
- Test clip export from every camera and confirm its time zone.
- Check how long video and event history remain available.
- Name cameras, doors, sensors, and users clearly.
- Keep at least two authorized household admins.
- Run internet and power tests and document local storage behavior.
- Review shared users, temporary codes, camera views, and recovery methods quarterly.
Use the no-subscription cost guide when comparing local and cloud storage, the security-without-internet guide for outage behavior, and the automation checklist for safer event rules.
Abode planning links
Compare Abode Cam 2 for video context, the Smart Security Kit for entry events, and current plans for the exact recording, history, backup, and response options available now.
FAQ
Should I edit a security-camera clip before sharing it?
Keep an untouched original first. If an edited copy helps explain the event, label it as a working copy and preserve the original filename and export details.
How much video should I save?
Save the event plus enough time before and after it to show arrival, direction, related people or vehicles, and what happened next. Storage and agency needs vary.
Are screenshots enough?
Screenshots can document an event timeline or account screen, but they should not replace the original video or native event export when those are available.