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IDEMIA Launches iCube, an Innovation and Incubation Program in India

I DEMIA, the global leader in Augmented Identity, launches iCube, an innovation and incubation program to support and assist Indian startups that leverage Augmented Identity. In a fast-changing digital environment, Identity has become an in dispensable building block for making businesses and cities safer and smarter in a vast range of environments and usages including financial services, healthcare, education, food sustainability, smart cities, IoT, e-Governance, e-commerce, travel & mobility, telecom, defense and more. IDEMIA addresses these new challenges and needs with the launch of iCube, a program designed to assist and speed up startups and innovators in their product development and commercial roll-out. Pierre Barrial, President & Chief Executive Officer at IDEMIA, stated, “IDEMIA has always been at the cutting edge of innovations in making the world a smarter and safer place. We are delighted to enable startups and developers to leverage the innovations we originally developed for corporations and governments across the globe. I am thrilled that the IDEMIA Innovation and Incubation program – iCube – is launched in India, one of our most vibrant markets globally. Not only do I look forward to help startups to succeed in India, but I am equally excited about taking some of their solutions to our customers across the world. I look forward to this mutually rewarding and exciting journey of co-creation.” Sanjeev Shriya, Managing Director IDEMIA India added, “Innovation is the core of IDEMIA’s identity. Over time, we have developed cutting edge solutions with a global impact in domains like Financial Services, Citizen Identity, Telecom, IoT or M2M. Thus, we are delighted to announce the launch of iCube – the IDEMIA Innovation and Incubation program that will help build compelling solutions for a safer and better world. This program is designed to assist startups and innovators by providing them access to our expertise and technology. It aims to speed up their product development and help them get to market faster.”   To further support developers and innovators, IDEMIA has open edits application program interfaces (APIs) and launched a credit program. In addition, IDEMIA’s engineers and its industry experts will share their insights and knowledge during several sessions and talks.   iCube will also work closely with corporations in curating and co-creating solutions that may be mutually beneficial. IDEMIA will engage with startups and innovators through the following programs: Startup Assistance Program: An ongoing program providing eligible startups credits to use IDEMIA and partner organizations’ technologies and products, APIs, SDKs, and other support. Accelerator Program: A curated 3-month program to help developers and startups become better prepared for market. Developer Program: A selected opportunity for startups to co-create solutions with IDEMIA’s technology teams and business teams. Scale Fast-Track Program: A selected access for startups to IDEMIA’s global client base and opportunity to jointly go to market with IDEMIA. iCube may also provide selected startups with office space in their world class incubation facility located in Noida, India. iCube has already partnered with Lumis Partners Supply Chain Labs and Freshworks to reach out to a wider range of startups and support them in their journey. IDEMIA, the global leader in Augmented Identity, provides a trusted environment enabling citizens and consumers alike to perform their daily critical activities (such as pay, connect and travel), in the physical as well as digital space. Securing our identity has become mission critical in the world we live in today. By standing for Augmented Identity, an identity that ensures privacy and trust and guarantees secure, authenticated and verifiable transactions, we reinvent the way we think, produce, use and protect one of our greatest assets – our identity – whether for individuals or for objects, whenever and wherever security matters. We provide Augmented Identity for international clients from Financial, Telecom, Identity, Public Security and IoT sectors. With close to 15,000 employees around the world, IDEMIA serves clients in 180 countries.  

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Private Security: Essentialities, Achievements & Challenges

Crises have a way of reminding us of the essential nature of some of the services in society – such as private security. Our Government has publicly recognised private security as essential services, but the COVID-19 situation also exacerbated the challenges that the private security industry has been facing for many years. Now is the time for urgent relief to struggling businesses. But one can also draw the first lessons learned – beyond COVID-19, the essential character of private security must be recognised in public procurement practices and the ‘security continuum.’ While the country went into lockdown and brought public and economic life to a standstill, Central Association of Private Security Industry (CAPSI ) was calling for its sector to be recognised as essential services. This gave access to special ‘rights’ such as free movement of workers or access to join duties. Failing such recognition, many warned, would mean that the growing demand for private security services to ensure the protection of critical infrastructures, warehouses and supply chains, supermarkets and hospitals could not be dealt with. Well-deserved recognition of the security sector: Private security a essential service Thanks to the excellent work of State Chapters of CAPSI that almost all members – including private security companies and workers received the recognition they deserved for joining the frontline in the fight against the Coronavirus. CAPSI launched a social media campaign seeking public appreciation for security guards who are working in the most hostile health conditions. The campaign was well received – people started treating security guards with respect, and that raised the morale of security guards and supervisors. Corporate security managers are recognising them publicly for the rendition of their good services. The impact was so strong that a majority of security guards didn’t abandon their posts even under great family pressure during mass reverse migration from major cities to their villages. Their performance not only helped the police forces in the day-to-day protection of people and property. They also helped in the protection of supermarkets, hospitals, health centres, and other services. With their support, the police also helped control/ stop the spread of the virus. There cannot be a security continuum without pro-active engagement of public authorities, public-private partnerships in joint matters of interest, and public procurement of security services that is based on value, and not on low costs only. This has been a problem since the past decades when new threats posed challenges to public security, and it is a problem that weighs even heavier in times of crisis. Private security companies are not provided with the financial, human, and administrative tools to properly respond to the exceptional demand for the protection of critical assets at a time when security is key factor. On the brighter side, the outstanding engagement of the sector including its businesses and workers, is still reported on by many media. Private security guards working under tough circumstances in hospitals, gated colonies, vital infrastructures, business establishments, supermarkets, and supply chains are recognised as everyday heroes, as many articles in popular newspapers and social media platforms highlight. Further, private security continues to stay sideby-side to those who save lives in the healthcare sector and in hospitals all over the country. Most are unseen, a few receive specific attention.   Economic challenges Still, many challenges remain – the most urgent one being for many companies to pay their workers and guarantee sufficient cash flow. Business activities during COVID-19 in many service segments have come to a complete standstill such as tourism, retail, entertainment, hospitality and event security. While the EU and member states have massively vamped up their financial support structures to companies, many still fear the economic consequences of this crisis – which are diverse. The way forward So, while private security continues to protect the functioning of hospitals, industries, supply chains, malls etc., across the country, our sector and many companies will be hit hard by the crisis. It is important that these companies now receive the financial and social support they require. Their services will be needed again once this crisis is over. It is therefore equally important that the Indian economy succeeds in restarting quickly once the health crisis is under control. Lessons must be learned, and consequences faced. CAPSI and its members will monitor with utmost attention that companies and workers receive financial and social aid, and that the economic crisis does not exacerbate the existing problem of low-cost focused procurement of private security services. Mostly commercial buyers unilaterally suspended the payment of invoices, extended payment terms, and forced service providers to lower rates in order to find solutions for their own decline in turnover – a very bad omen for what’s to come. Such practices damage the sustainable functioning of our essential services tremendously and stand in contrast to the role private security plays in managing the COVID-19 situation. Best value procurement is key for the sector to ensure economic growth and fair wages, and to overcome challenges in finding urgently required, skilled, labour to provide quality services. The recognition of private security as essential services cannot be switched on or off according to the situation. It is time for the MHA to finally see the sector for what it is – an important source of high-quality security services, which is always there to protect businesses, supply chains, and citizens, and which must, therefore, be supported by public authorities through public-private cooperation and best value procurement that respects important quality criteria. Security is a basic human need and right. Private security is not a service like the others. The industry has shown that it was always there to protect people, assets, and infrastructure. CAPSI thinks it is time the Government gives the private security sector the statute, recognition and support it deserves.  

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OSPAs India Presents First Outstanding Security Performance Awards

The Indian Security Industry recently showcased its talents and exceptional accomplishments on a global platform during the presentation of the 2020 India OSPAs which took place virtually on Saturday, 8 August 2020. As a part of an online Thought Leadership Summit, OSPAs was organised in association with BW Businessworld, and BW Securityworld & SecurityLinkIndia as the Media Partners. OSPA winners were selected by an esteemed panel of industry figures, through their respective industry associations, who judged entries using the standard criteria applied across the world, in every country where OSPAs conducts the awards. Each winner demonstrated that it has performed at an extraordinary level and has shown its commitment and outstanding performance within the security sector. On the occasion, Rajiv Mathur, Regional Advisor for Asia, and the man behind getting OSPAs into India said, “OSPAs were established in UK and had the first event in Norway in 2015 and now has come to India. In my opinion and if you see the mirror image of this journey as on date, it is not only that OSPAs have come to India, instead, it is the Indian Security Industry which has now gone global. It is the outstanding performances of our security professionals which has taken the world stage. It is the deeds and heroics of Fellow Security Professionals which are being showcased now in several countries and will be talked about for many weeks to come. We have winners in each category, but I think it is India, it is Indian Security Industry who is a winner and I am proud of it; I am proud to be a part of this festival.” The OSPAs is a global awards scheme created to reward companies and individuals across the security sector. They are based on strict ethical principles with a transparent process to create a level playing field. Judges are nominated by the security associations. The aim is to produce truly credible winners and to then celebrate their success. The OSPAs evolved from extensive research. Professor Martin Gill, founder of the OSPAs and his team undertook a research project with the aim of finding out what distinguishes those who are excellent in matters of security from those who are just average. And it was that process of saying “Let’s find out who is outstanding, and let’s find out why that’s the case,” which shaped the OSPAs and helped produce a set of criteria by which nominations are assessed. In the security world it is difficult to show that you do a good job. Some say cynically that when a security professional reduces crime, the response isn’t “Well done,” the response is “We don’t need you anymore.” Security is often under appreciated – the role is not understood and success is not celebrated, and understanding why people are doing a good job in security is crucial as it’s important to recognise what they are doing that makes them good. This is why OSPAs give so much weight to the judging process and criteria. We aim to make the judging panel representative of the whole security sector by asking each of the major security associations to nominate a judge. All judges follow a strict code of conduct and mark all entries independently against the criteria set out in the category requirements. The aim is to select finalists and winners in a way that reflects the OSPAs core values: to be independent, credible, transparent and respectable. At the moment the OSPAs operate in 13 countries, with more to be announced. The idea is that in due course by winning in a category in your own country you go into a global awards programme. Already we’re finding that there’s a lot of prestige to winning, and I think going forward this will be more so the case. But ultimately what’s most important to me is that in every country we recognise that there’s a big difference between ‘outstanding’ as opposed to ‘good’, and the consequences of being outstanding are dramatic for the end user. The India OSPAs will return for a second edition in 2021. The organisers and BW Securityworld look forward to holding the event physically next year.  

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Fisheye Cameras Broad Surveillance and Better Business Insight in one Discreet Package

Installing a surveillance solution that offers a clear view over a large area can require multiple cameras, extensive cabling, licenses, management – and the cost soon adds up. But through the latest AI-powered fisheye cameras, organizations can capture a broad field of view in a single discreet package – and gain a wealth of business insight in the process. Cutting-edge fisheye cameras: The all-seeing eyes that offer a wealth of functionality Getting clear surveillance over a large area – such as a warehouse, a grocery store or a parking lot – isn’t always the simplest task, and it typically calls for multiple cameras and cabling to be installed at a variety of locations, in order to cover all fields of view. To tackle these challenges, many organizations are choosing to install cutting-edge fisheye cameras. These innovative, all-seeing eyes can deliver up to a 360 degree view of their surroundings. Fisheye cameras work by using a panoramic lens to capture the view of multiple cameras in one single device. If positioned on the wall, they offer a 180 degree view, and when on the ceiling, they offer a 360 degree coverage of the floor below – with no blind spots. However, the most advanced fisheye cameras on the market don’t stop there. Through ‘dewarping’ software, users can choose to re-render a fisheye image into different formats, so that the camera behaves just like a virtual PTZ. AI-based solution for security and business insight I n this way, a single fisheye camera is a very efficient and cost-effective way to achieve high quality surveillance of a large or complex area. What’s more, the latest cameras with built-in heat mapping and people counting offer incredible insight for companies whose business thrives on sales. For example, store managers can use heat mapping to identify how people move through the shop floor, and arrange products in the optimal place to attract them. Later, heat map data can be compared with sales figures, for further insight into the effectiveness of the marketing strategy. At museums and entertainment facilities, people counting data and customer flow information may come handy for safety teams and marketing teams, which need to better understand how they can protect and serve their customers. And of course, one single fisheye camera is typically far more unobtrusive than a full suite of surveillance cameras, making them ideal for locations where aesthetics matter, or where surveillance profile needs to be low Prama Hikvision: Top-of-the-range fisheye cameras with market-leading extras Prama Hikvision fisheye cameras are among the most sophisticated on the market today. Featuring top-of-therange immervision lenses, they deliver a wider angle of view, less distortion, and sharper, and more detailed images than many other cameras on the market, which results in more natural images once they have been de-warped. What’s more, the in-built deep-learning-based AI applications such as heat mapping, intersection flow analysis, and people counting, empower users with a wealth of data for business analysis, reporting, and smarter decision-making.  

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