Intelligent CISO Issue 14 | Page 44

Alexander Belyaev, Technical Director at NNTC industry unlocked T Artificial Intelligence (AI) is being implemented into video surveillance systems in a bid to tackle crime and help reduce roadside deaths and traffic jams. Here, Alexander Belyaev, Technical Director at NNTC, discusses the importance of video surveillance with biometric identification in the transport sector when it comes to protecting the public. 44 Today in big cities there are hardly any crowded areas left without standard video cameras and thus video surveillance systems. They help to monitor and investigate incidents but, unfortunately, play little to no role in preventing them. This is why for the past several years we have seen a booming development of video analytics solutions which are capable of capturing and identifying a car in traffic flow or an individual in a crowd, as well as their features and behavioural patterns. By 2019, facial recognition and video analytics technology became more sophisticated and reliable for its industrial applications. You can now call it ‘person recognition’ as it can also recognise the way of walking and clothes worn. According to the research company MarketsandMarkets, Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology is expected to exceed US$35 billion in revenue in the global security market by 2024. One of the top AI use cases is related to video surveillance systems with computer vision. The UAE takes active steps towards the integration of AI into Smart City solutions. For example, Dubai is working on the ‘Oyoon’ (‘Eyes’) project, AI-assisted video surveillance designed to tackle crime in the city and help reduce roadside deaths and traffic jams. Video surveillance systems powered by biometric identification are experiencing tremendous growth, as it is a technology that can identify a person by checking multiple parameters and finding a match across hundreds of thousands of images within various security-related agencies’ databases. In addition, such systems can serve many other purposes. Financial institutions leverage biometrics for customer authentication, while retailers use it to offer personalised ads. Furthermore, there is no substitute for this technology when it comes to public safety. For example, people on the wanted list can be found among thousands of passengers at the airport or at the train station in real time. Many countries make exceptions in their legislation for biometric data processing consent requirements when the matters of transport security, counter-terrorism and search for criminals are concerned. By 2019, facial recognition and video analytics technology became more sophisticated and reliable for its industrial applications. Issue 14 | www.intelligentciso.com