Brian Sims
Editor

Hanwha Vision outlines five key video surveillance trends for 2024

SECURITY SOLUTIONS developer Hanwha Vision has identified five trends that will impact video surveillance in the New Year. Already commanding significant attention, those trends are set to assume even greater prominence in 2024 as technology develops still further and end users turn their video systems towards new and innovative business applications.

Video surveillance technology has evolved over the past decade. As a result, significant opportunities have now opened up for system installers, integrators and end users alike. According to Hanwha Vision, those who embrace the transformation of video – from single application security technology through to a solution that leverages Artificial Intelligence (AI) and the cloud to help users meet wider business challenges – will be the ones who reap considerable benefits.

Indeed, this evolution of video technology, from its roots in security to taking pride of place in the business technology toolkit alongside 5G and the Internet of Things, for example, is confirmed in the results of a study recently conducted by Hanwha Vision Europe.

The company’s survey of 1,000 business leaders in the UK, the Netherlands, Italy, Germany and France reveals that almost one-third (ie 31%) now champion AI-enabled video as a means of solving their business challenges. For context, this is nearly double the number who favour automation and robotics (17%) and almost the same as those who believe 5G and the Internet of Things (IoT) to be essential for solving their challenges (32%).

Pread Um (Suk Bong), product and marketing director at Hanwha Vision Europe, has noted: “Video holds huge potential in streamlining operations, providing valuable data to inform strategy and planning and helping to secure people and assets. In 2024, video looks set to establish itself as an essential tool for the business community.”

AI-powered business game-changer

The increasing combination of security cameras and AI is key to the transformation of video technology from pure surveillance functions to a wider business use.

Hanwha Vision has long championed trustworthy AI for video, in turn rightly predicting that the technology would accelerate to enable data insights and forecasting through deep real-time event and post-incident analysis.

Given the development of the technology, Pread Um (Suk Bong) has highlighted its increasing value: “Data and AI-driven predictive analytics provide valuable insights into critical business processes and help identify risks before they emerge.”

AI-based predictive analytics in video consists of three processes: video information collection, exploratory data analysis and scenario modelling. Sectors including smart cities, retail, manufacturing, logistics and healthcare are putting the technology to work in order to gain efficiency through cost reduction, process optimisation and service quality improvements. They’re also using video to improve safety and prevent accidents.

2024 could well be the year that AI-enabled video breaks through into mainstream business use.

Edge continues to gain momentum

The considerable interest in AI ‘at the edge’ will only grow in 2024. By combining AI and edge computing in the camera itself (ie ‘at the edge’), data is processed when and where it’s generated. This helps users to gain immediate insights from their video data and save time and money, as large amounts of data do not need to be transferred to separate locations for storage and processing. A single edge device takes care of everything: from video capture and storage right through to analysis and cloud connectivity. There’s no need for separate system infrastructures.

Pread Um (Suk Bong) observed: “The biggest advantage of edge AI cameras is that video analysis takes place on-site, providing faster insights to facilitate real-time decision-making in often critical scenarios.”

For its part, Hanwha Vision continues to add more features to edge AI cameras in a bid to meet the needs of different verticals. In 2024, more sector-specific edge AI functions will be introduced to address common challenges in retail, manufacturing and logistics-focused applications.

As part of Hanwha Vision’s commitment to developing solutions at the edge, 2023 witnessed the introduction of SolidEDGE, the first solid-state drive-based camera that allows recording at the edge itself.

Transition to the cloud

The benefits of cloud services were demonstrated during the pandemic, with business trust in the cloud increasing significantly as a result. Pread Um (Suk Bong) explaind: “Now, as AI becomes prevalent, we see businesses investing in cloud-based services to support video strategies that are built around AI.”

Unlike building an on-premise solution, cloud technology can be scaled according to demand, with many European organisations increasing their cost-efficiency through cloud services that do not require a large initial investment and can be managed centrally and scaled up or down with ease.

What’s more, a cloud-based video surveillance system – or Video Surveillance-as-a-Service (VSaaS) – can be easily incorporated into an existing system and integrated with other systems such as access control, fire detection and building management, not to mention AI and data analytics solutions.

Cyber security and the business agenda

The convergence of new technologies, such as the cloud and AI, has advanced the capabilities of video cameras and ensured their widespread adoption across sectors of all types.

At the same time, cyber security threats have increased. In response, 2024 is expected to witness the introduction of the Cyber Resilience Act and the Network and Information Security Directive 2nd Edition (NIS2) across the European Union.

The former is a regulation that sets minimum cyber security requirements for products with digital elements. Products – including video cameras – must be designed and developed with security in mind, protected against known vulnerabilities and updated regularly with security patches.

NIS2, meanwhile, is a directive adopted by the European Parliament and the Council of the European Union in December 2020. Member States are expected to comply with NIS2 by October 2024 to meet specific measures aimed at improving the cyber security of network and information systems across the European Union.

Pread Um (Suk Bong) said: “As the Cyber Resilience Act and NIS2 come online, users, installers and integrators must ensure the manufacturers they work with are compliant. Hanwha Vision has already announced its preparedness for the upcoming legislation.”

Indeed, Hanwha Vision has been hardening its security measures for many years now, including the removal of chipsets manufactured in blacklisted countries from its products and basing its manufacturing operations in South Korea and Vietnam.

Hanwha Vision also operates a dedicated cyber security team, dubbed S-CERT, that conducts regular security tests to discover and address security vulnerabilities on a prompt footing. The company continuously obtains certifications from reputable global accreditation bodies to strengthen its overall security processes.

Further, this year has seen Hanwha Vision being authorised as a CVE Numbering Authority.

Sustainability: a condition of doing business

In 2024, European businesses will be required to report more widely about their sustainability achievements as the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive rolls out across the European Union in a phased approach. It’s anticipated that almost 50,000 firms will be impacted by the Directive, making up some three-quarters of businesses in the European Economic Area.

For its part, the video surveillance industry must address the growing importance of sustainable development, such as low-impact manufacturing that reduces waste and uses renewable forms of energy.

Fortunately, this is already the case at Hanwha Vision’s production plant located in Bac Ninh Province, Vietnam. The 60,000 m2 manufacturing facility, which recently celebrated the production of its ten millionth product since opening in 2018, is built around environmental Best Practice. The smart factory runs on power generated by solar panels installed on the roof of the building.

Beyond manufacturing, there’s the ongoing impact of video cameras, for example, across energy usage. Pread Um (Suk Bong) observed: “Energy prices continue to present a challenge for organisations around Europe. Hanwha Vision is working on new technologies that reduce the energy consumption associated with camera operation and data analysis.”

These include low-light camera technology that saves energy while still delivering clear images and the power savings resulting from AI ‘at the edge’, which reduces bandwidth and storage needs as less data must be transmitted back to a server for analysis.

Finally, Hanwha Vision’s SolidEdge cameras actively lower energy usage by employing an edge-based VMS, thereby removing the need for separate servers to store video and enable event management.

*Further information is available online at www.hanwhavision.eu

Company Info

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64 High Street, RH19 3DE
EAST GRINSTEAD
RH19 3DE
UNITED KINGDOM

03227 14

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