![]() ![]() Unfortunately, out of the box, this probably won’t work. After adding the source, stretch it to fill the scene. ![]() ![]() Enter the in the URL and set your target resolution - I use 1280x720.Give your source a useful name and click OK.In OBS, under Sources, click the ‘+’ and select ‘Browser’.This page can be added as a ‘Browser’ source in OBS to bring in a pre-blurred webcam video stream. You can find a hosted version of Lazy Webcam Blur over at Taking heavy inspiration from VDO.ninja, I scraped together a single-page-application, Lazy Webcam Blur which uses some of the same methods of blurring ( BodyPix + TensorflowJS) as VDO.ninja, but doesn’t do anything else - no UI and no interactions needed. Where this comes in handy in this case is that you can use this for a single stream, but it does mean leaving the ‘server’ browser tab open and active. There are plenty of options out there (such as OBS Background Removal - if you fancy compiling your own OBS plugin.), but none were quite as easy to use as I’d like.įor a while, I used the very useful VDO.ninja, which lets you broadcast your camera from one browser instance to any other browser, applying filters such as background removal on the way.īy opening the ‘viewing’ URL using OBS’ embedded browser source, you can pull together multiple video streams, ideal for composing group calls inside OBS. The most complicated part of this process is getting blurring working. This will give us the tools we need to import all sorts of sources (like your webcam), apply filters to them and create a new ‘Virtual’ webcam with those filters applied. First up, this process does require running Open Broadcaster Software (OBS). ![]()
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