Business Surveillance Systems Corporate monitoring of a person’s or group’s activities is known as corporate surveillance. The information gathered is most typically used for marketing or sold to other firms, but it is also shared with government organizations on a regular basis. It can be used as a type of business intelligence, allowing the firm to better tailor its products and/or services to its client’s preferences. Although it is widely held that monitoring can boost productivity, it can also have unintended consequences, such as increasing the likelihood of deviant conduct and imposing sanctions that are inequitable to its acts.
Different types of surveillance are used by businesses to protect their personnel, assets, and property against criminal elements and other hostile security breaches. Business owners invest time and money in their businesses and should take advantage of the numerous technologies available to secure this investment. The type and amount of surveillance should be determined by the sort of business and the nature of the information and assets that need to be protected.
Video Surveillance
Business Surveillance Systems use cameras both outside and inside their buildings for a variety of reasons. Outside cameras deter unauthorized entrance and include all-weather casings for protection from the elements, as well as the capacity to produce high-quality photos in low-light conditions. Inside cameras assure employee honesty when it comes to important goods and cash, as well as protect against unauthorized entrance after the firm has closed. Security agencies can link these cameras into the corporate network or arrange them so that owners can watch live video from anywhere in the world over the Internet. Business owners may also choose to buy closed-circuit television monitors with touch screens for viewing video feeds. Operators can change camera angles remotely thanks to the touch screens.
ANPR
Automatic number-plate recognition is a technology that reads car registration plates using optical character recognition on photographs to generate vehicle position data. It can make use of existing closed-circuit television, road-rule enforcement cameras, or cameras created particularly for the role. Police forces all across the world employ ANPR for law enforcement purposes, including determining if a vehicle is registered or licensed. It is also used for electronic toll collection on pay-per-use roads and as a technique of cataloging traffic movements, such as by highway authorities.
Under Vehicle Information Systems
A UVIS consists of cameras that are mounted on the road to capture images of the underbody of the vehicle and detect if there is any threat underneath the vehicle, like bombs and others. It was created for the first time in the 1980s.
Face Recognition
A facial recognition system is a computer program that automatically identifies or verifies a person based on a digital image or a video frame from a video source. One method is to compare chosen facial traits from the image to a facial database. To conduct the person identification operation, the face detection and recognition system employs a video camera and a standard PC. This method works by comparing many of the facial traits in a person’s photograph to existing images in the database.
Conclusion
Businesses look for the best surveillance technologies to safeguard assets and property. Currently, there are AI-enabled, Augmented Reality based surveillance technologies that improve the way Video Surveillance works. At OdiTek, we have strong experience of working on a variety of access control systems, face recognition, behavior analysis, ANPRs, etc. Please drop an email for more information to info@oditeksolutions.com