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Alarm.com Introduces Premium Indoor Camera With Built-In Privacy Shutter and Color Night Vision

Business

Alarm.com Introduces Premium Indoor Camera With Built-In Privacy Shutter and Color Night Vision
Business

Business

Alarm.com Introduces Premium Indoor Camera With Built-In Privacy Shutter and Color Night Vision

2026-06-19 04:05 Last Updated At:04:21

TYSONS, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 18, 2026--

Alarm.com (Nasdaq: ALRM), the leading platform for intelligently connected properties, announced the ADC‑V530, a premium indoor Wi-Fi camera designed to deliver strong security and built-in privacy. The V530 delivers 4MP HDR video, color night vision with an integrated spotlight, and a physical privacy shutter, all at a lower cost than the previous generation indoor camera.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260618610730/en/

The ADC‑V530 is Alarm.com’s first indoor camera with a built-in privacy shutter that physically blocks the lens when closed. Customers can control the shutter manually or automate it based on schedules and rules in the Alarm.com app. This makes it easy to keep an eye on spaces while they are away and confidently shut off the camera view when they are at home. The camera also supports the full suite of proactive deterrence and monitoring services available on the Alarm.com platform.

“With the V530, we set out to remove the biggest objection to indoor cameras,” said Dan Kerzner, President of Platforms Business at Alarm.com. “Customers get sharper video, better visibility at night, and a physical privacy control they can see and trust, all included with the Alarm.com platform.”

Sharper Video and Better Visibility

The ADC‑V530 captures clear 4MP HDR video with a 110‑degree field of view, providing improved detail for live and recorded footage. An integrated spotlight enables color video at night, helping customers see what’s happening clearly after dark while also supporting deterrence features such as AI Deterrence, Perimeter Guard®, and manually triggered warning sounds.

Smarter Alerts and Flexible Recording

The V530 includes updated Video Analytics that detect people, animals, vehicles, and business activity, delivering more relevant alerts and reducing unnecessary recordings. Customers can customize recording rules through a redesigned interface that makes it easier to fine-tune notifications and deterrence responses.

Eligible domestic U.S. customers on Premium Video or Commercial Video Plus packages can also access AI Video Event search, allowing them to quickly find specific recorded events using natural language search.*

For continuous coverage, the ADC‑V530 supports encrypted local recording using onboard microSD storage and integrates with Alarm.com Stream Video Recorders for 24/7 recording.

Designed for Homes and Small Businesses

The ADC‑V530 is well suited for residential spaces as well as small and medium‑sized businesses. Business users can access Business Activity Analytics to gain insights into traffic patterns and customer behavior, while after hours the built-in spotlight and professional video monitoring options help protect indoor spaces.

The Alarm.com 4MP Indoor Wi-Fi Camera with Integrated Spotlight (ADC‑V530) is available now through Alarm.com service providers in all supported markets. The camera works with Alarm.com’s residential and commercial video service packages, with feature availability based on the selected plan.

For more information about the ADC‑V530 and Alarm.com’s complete video security ecosystem, visit www.alarm.com.

*AI Video Event Search is not available in Illinois due to local laws.

About Alarm.com

Alarm.com is the leading platform for intelligently connected properties. Millions of homeowners and businesses rely on Alarm.com’s technology to secure, monitor, and manage their environments from anywhere. Our comprehensive suite of solutions—including security, video surveillance, access control, active shooter detection, intelligent automation, energy management, and wellness—is delivered exclusively through a trusted network of thousands of professional service providers and commercial integrators across North America and worldwide. Alarm.com’s common stock is traded on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol ALRM. To learn more, visit www.alarm.com.

Alarm.com announces the release of the 4MP Indoor Wi-Fi Camera with Integrated Spotlight (ADC-V530).

Alarm.com announces the release of the 4MP Indoor Wi-Fi Camera with Integrated Spotlight (ADC-V530).

NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball owners proposed banning high school players from signing with major league teams, raising the age for international amateurs and slashing the money spent on signing bonuses in negotiations Thursday for a new collective bargaining agreement.

The amateur draft for players residing in the U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico would be cut from 20 rounds to 12 beginning in 2027 under the proposal Major League Baseball made during a bargaining session with the players' association. An identical 12-round draft would be started for international prospects, a proposal the union has rejected in the past.

Starting in 2028, a prospect for the amateur draft would have to be at least 20 years old by the Sept. 1 of his signing year and two years removed from the graduating year of his high school class — a restriction that also would eliminate players who completed their first year of junior college.

The amateur draft started in 1965, high schoolers have been eligible along with college players who are in or have just finished their junior years.

Raising signing ages would likely lead to players being older when they become eligible for free agency, which currently requires six years of major league service.

MLB cited increased revenue in college baseball as reasoning. In addition, MLB said 75% of high schoolers signed from 2012-19 did not reach the major leagues.

“Expanded scholarships, NIL opportunities, revenue sharing and significant investments in facilities and player development have made college baseball an increasingly important pathway that is producing major league-ready talent at an accelerated rate," MLB said in a statement. “By creating a draft system centered around college-aged players and making most college players eligible one year earlier, more players will benefit from both a college education and an elite development environment while reaching professional baseball — and ultimately the major leagues — more quickly.”

The players' association claimed the plan would decrease compensation by $1 billion over five years, including $400 million from this year to 2027.

“MLB made another set of proposals that are flat-out bad for baseball, ones that would cripple the next generation of players and damage the future of our game,” the union said in a statement.

MLB said it will not seek to reduce the 120 minor league teams in the top four levels when it negotiates new professional development licenses in 2030 to replace expiring 10-year deals. It would cap bonuses for undrafted players at $10,000 — Middle Tennessee two-way player Trace Phillips was bypassed in the draft last July and signed with Tampa Bay for $629,200.

For international amateurs, the age to sign would be raised to 18 on the Sept. 1 of their signing year, up from 17.

“The game's greatest stars are precocious talents. We always want to have a great window for them,” said Scott Boras, baseball's most high-profile agent. “International markets recognize this, as well. When you bar a labor force from opportunity in America, it is not an American concept.”

Each separate draft would have $200 million in signing pools in 2027. There would be hard caps for each draft.

Teams would be able to trade draft picks but a club couldn't trade its first-round pick in consecutive drafts. A team couldn't acquire more than three additional selections among the first three rounds.

Spending on signing bonuses for players eligible for the 2025 amateur draft have totaled $401.81 million and signing bonus pools for 2026 increased by 2.5%.

Each team would have the same amount to spend under the proposal rather than the current system which gives higher pools to teams with poorer records in the previous year. Pittsburgh is at just over $19 million this year and the World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers at slightly under $4 million. Teams currently can go over their pools and often do as much as 5%.

Teams have spent $196.38 million on signing bonuses for international amateurs in 2026. The current signing period runs from Jan. 15 to Dec. 15 each year, but the initial international draft would be no earlier than September 2027 and no later than March 2028.

MLB proposed eliminating competitive balance round picks that began in 2023 and cutting the draft lottery that started in 2023 from the top six picks to four.

Bargaining began May 13 and the sides exchanged initial proposals two weeks later as management proposed a salary cap for the first time since 1994, which resulted in a 7 1/2-month strike and the first cancellation of the World Series in 90 years,

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

FILE - Attorney Bruce Meyer, the current interim executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, speaks at a news conference in New York on March 11, 2022. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

FILE - Attorney Bruce Meyer, the current interim executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, speaks at a news conference in New York on March 11, 2022. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)

FILE - Commissioner of Major League Baseball Rob Manfred answers questions during a news conference at the MLB winter meetings, Dec. 8, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux, file)

FILE - Commissioner of Major League Baseball Rob Manfred answers questions during a news conference at the MLB winter meetings, Dec. 8, 2025, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux, file)

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