If you do not want to use a VPN, you can disable WebRTC in your browser settings. This prevents the leak of your local IP address. However, be warned: Disabling WebRTC often breaks the functionality of video chat sites entirely, meaning you may not be able to use the service at all.

Simply ask: "Can you show me a local currency note?" or "Quickly turn your camera to a window – what does the street sign look like?" Most genuine users are happy to play along.

An Ome TV IP locator extension is a browser add-on (typically for Chrome, Firefox, or Edge) that claims to reveal the geographical location and IP address of the stranger you are currently chatting with on Ome TV.

Modern browsers have patched the glaring WebRTC leaks that made early "IP sniffers" possible. While minor leaks still exist, OMeTV’s code actively tries to prevent IP exposure from the client side.

Verdict: An extension claiming to locate OMeTV users with high accuracy is likely either a scam, outdated, or relies on social engineering (e.g., tricking the other user into clicking a link).

The extension doesn’t hack or break OME TV’s encryption. Instead, it:

In theory, an extension intercepts the WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication) requests made by Ome TV. WebRTC is the HTML5 protocol that allows video and audio communication directly in the browser. To establish a peer-to-peer (P2P) connection, your browser must briefly exchange IP addresses with the other user’s browser.

A malicious or poorly coded extension could theoretically scrape this data from the browser’s local session and display it in a sidebar.

However, there is a massive catch: Ome TV does not use direct peer-to-peer connections. It uses a relay server model to protect user privacy. This means the stranger’s real IP is never sent to your browser. Therefore, most "Ome TV IP locator" extensions are either fake, scams, or use deceptive methods (like matching usernames to public databases—which rarely works).


The honest answer is 99% no. Here is why: