Control which apps can access your webcam in Windows 10

Webcams have become essential stuff these days. Having a camera as part of your system lets you make Skype video calls, take pictures, etc. But with a number of modern apps installed in the system, the user needs to be in control as to which apps are allowed to access the camera.

Windows 10 lets you choose which UWP or modern apps can use your camera. To configure this, open Settings (Winkey + i), click Privacy and click Camera.

control webcam access apps

There you can enable “Let apps use my camera” and under “Choose apps that can use your camera”, you can turn off individual apps settings on or off.

To block all apps from using the camera you can turn off the master switch “Let apps use my camera”.

control webcam access apps

After blocking Skype app from accessing the camera, using webcam in Skype app showed up with a black background.

Windows 10 camera and privacy page states:

Even if you turn the camera off for each app under Choose apps that can use your camera, some of the listed apps might still be able to open the camera to let you take pictures or videos. But the camera won’t capture images or video unless you explicitly select the Photo or Video button.

If you turn on Windows Hello, it will use your camera to sign you in even if Let apps use my camera is turned off.

The above settings apply to the current user account. To apply it on a per-system basis you can use the Group Policy Editor. Start the Group Policy Editor and go to:



Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > App Privacy

Double-click “Let Windows apps access the camera”.

camera group policy settings

There you can allow or deny specific applications from accessing the camera. You can deny all but specific apps (or the other way) using the Application package family name such as:

Microsoft.WindowsMaps_8wekyb3d8bbwe

You can obtain the package family name using PowerShell’s Get-AppxPackage command.

This policy setting specifies whether Windows apps can access the camera. You can specify either a default setting for all apps or a per-app setting by specifying a Package Family Name. You can get the Package Family Name for an app by using the Get-AppPackage Windows PowerShell cmdlet. A per-app setting overrides the default setting.

If you choose the “User is in control” option, employees in your organization can decide whether Windows apps can access the camera by using Settings > Privacy on the device.

If you choose the “Force Allow” option, Windows apps are allowed to access the camera and employees in your organization cannot change it.

If you choose the “Force Deny” option, Windows apps are not allowed to access the camera and employees in your organization cannot change it.

Also, take a look at the “Allow use of Camera” GPO here:

Computer Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > Camera

Note that the setting and the GPO apply only to the modern or Universal apps — classic desktop programs aren’t listed on the Settings page. Desktop programs can use the camera arbitrarily, as there isn’t a unified setting or Group Policy to control which (Win32) programs can access the camera.


One small request: If you liked this post, please share this?

One "tiny" share from you would seriously help a lot with the growth of this blog. Some great suggestions:
  • Pin it!
  • Share it to your favorite blog + Facebook, Reddit
  • Tweet it!
So thank you so much for your support. It won't take more than 10 seconds of your time. The share buttons are right below. :)

See also How to Find Which Program is Currently Using Your Webcam

Ramesh Srinivasan is passionate about Microsoft technologies and he has been a consecutive ten-time recipient of the Microsoft Most Valuable Professional award in the Windows Shell/Desktop Experience category, from 2003 to 2012. He loves to troubleshoot and write about Windows. Ramesh founded Winhelponline.com in 2005.

1 thought on “Control which apps can access your webcam in Windows 10”

  1. Thank you so much for this. Some weak unwanted malware was using my camera and I was super scared. I covered the camera and after a bunch of other articles came here. I am not sure how many of my photos were leaked but at least I can stop that now.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Random Person Cancel reply