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New Report Reveals Brazilians Face 252 Scam Encounters Annually Despite High Confidence in Spotting Fraud

State of Scam Brazil Report Shows R$99 billion Lost;Cross-Sector Webinar to Address Growing Crisis The Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA) has released its State of Scam Brazil Report 2025 revealing an alarming disconnect between confidence and vulnerability – while 75% of Brazilians believe they can recognize scams, 70% have fallen victim to at least one within the past year. The report estimates total losses at R$99 billion, underscoring the urgent need for coordinated action across sectors. Part of a landmark global study covering 42 markets and interviewing 46,000 people worldwide, the Brazilian findings from 1,000 adults paint a troubling picture of daily vulnerability. Brazilians encounter scams on average once every day and a half – totaling 252 encounters per person annually. These encounters occur most frequently through phone calls (65%), text messages (55%), and email (55%), with shopping scams emerging as the most common type of fraud. “Scams have become part of everyday life in Brazil. The fact that most people feel confident spotting scams, yet continue to fall for them, shows how sophisticated and convincing these schemes have become,” said Renata Salvini, GASA Chapter Director Brazil, “Education, prevention, collaboration, and accountability must go hand in hand if we want to stop this cycle.” The human cost beyond financial loss The report reveals that 86% of scam victims felt very or somewhat stressed by their experience, while 59% reported significant or moderate impacts on their mental wellbeing. On average, each victim has been scammed 1.9 times in the past year, demonstrating how repeat victimization compounds both financial and psychological harm.Despite the prevalence of scams, reporting remains disappointingly low. While just over two-thirds of those exposed have reported an incident, 60% of those who did report said either no action was taken (44%) or they were unsure of the outcome (16%). Among those who never reported, 44% cited the belief that reporting wouldn’t make a difference – reflecting a troubling perception that the problem is unmanageable. Read More

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Genetec Continues to Expand its Share of The Global Access Control Software Market, According to Latest Omdia Report

Company records strong organic market share gain worldwide, reflecting 20 years of access control innovation and rapid adoption of ACaaS solutions According to the newly released 2025 Access Control Report from global research firm Omdia, Genetec Inc. (Genetec), the global company in enterprise physical security software, continues to expand its share of the global access control software market, maintaining its #2 position worldwide*. In an industry shaped by mergers and acquisitions, the report shows that Genetec achieved the highest organic global market share gain in on-premises access control software. For customers, partnering with a company focused on product innovation and stable growth rather than portfolio consolidation means they can plan long-term with confidence. According to the Omdia report, Genetec also ranked as one of the fastest organically growing vendors in the Access Control as a service (ACaaS) segment in the Americas region, which represents more than 70% of the global market. This growth was propelled by the rapid adoption of Security Center SaaS, the company’s open, unified physical security cloud-based platform. Genetec has delivered ACaaS solutions since 2017, demonstrating its long-standing experience in helping organizations adopt cloud-based access control at their own pace. Genetec retained its #2 position in the Americas for access control software market share, gained ground in EMEA, and remained among the top 10 providers in Asia Pacific*, where it once again recorded the region’s highest rate of organic growth. The access control software market has been the fastest growing global driver of access control equipment sales over the past decade as the industry has become more software centric. Cloud-based solutions have emerged as a significant growth driver due to their scalability and their enhanced data processing capabilities. The strong organic growth achieved by Genetec demonstrates the appeal of its flexible deployment options, broad interoperability with third-party hardware, and unified security systems platform Genetec access control solutions scale seamlessly from a single site to global deployments and give organizations the flexibility to run fully on-premises, in the cloud, or to deploy with a mix of both. Built on an open architecture, Genetec eliminates vendor lock-in and lets customers choose the hardware and third-party integrations that best meet their needs. Access control in Genetec Security Center and Security Center SaaS can also be unified with video, intrusion, communications, and other systems in a single interface, delivering stronger situational awareness and more efficient operations. In addition to its 2025 access control report, Omdia recently released its 2025 Video Surveillance & Analytics Report, which showed that Genetec retained its #1 position worldwide in video surveillance software, and is also ranked #1 globally in the broader category that combines video surveillance software and Video Surveillance as a Service (VSaaS). “For more than 25 years, our development strategy has focused on anticipating customer needs and delivering practical innovations. The consistent year-over-year growth noted by analysts in the access control and VMS markets is a testament to our long-standing commitment to open, unified systems, robust cybersecurity, and privacy by design,” said Christian Morin, Vice President of Product Engineering and Chief Security Officer at Genetec Inc. Read More

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Ajax Systems Opens a Factory in Vietnam

Ajax Systems, an international tech company and manufacturer of professional security systems, has opened a new production facility in Hanoi, Vietnam. This move expands and diversifies the company’s production capacity and strengthens its global position. The 8,300m² factory will produce the full range of Ajax devices and is expected to create more than 1,000 jobs within a year. “The new Ajax Systems’ factory in Vietnam is a strategic step towards global scaling, capacity expansion, and diversification of production facilities. We deliberately chose Vietnam because the country has favorable conditions for manufacturing, qualified specialists, developed industrial parks, and a wide network of suppliers. We like making Ajax multinational. The world is big, and we have a lot to learn. We want to produce better, faster, and more efficiently. We are confident that our Vietnamese team will help us achieve this,” said Aleksandr Konotopskyi, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Ajax Systems. Ajax Systems continues to develop its existing production facilities in Ukraine and Turkey. Product development takes place at three R&D centers in Kyiv, Lviv and Vinnytsia. The company is also strengthening local teams to expand the brand’s global presence. Today, Ajax devices are used in over 180 countries worldwide. Ajax Systems is an international tech company and the leading manufacturer of security systems in Europe, with over 4 million end users and 290K PRO users worldwide. The company offers end-to-end solutions for protecting homes and businesses of any scale. To date, Ajax product portfolio includes 180 devices for: Read More

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5 Ways How AI is Helping Businesses Navigate the Complex World of Cross-Border Trade

Sunil KharbandaCo-founder & COO at Trezix Navigating cross-border trade can feel like solving a puzzle, tariffs, regulations, and supply chain disruptions constantly shift the pieces. Thankfully, AI is turning this challenge into an opportunity. From automatically tracking international trade laws and ensuring compliance, to predicting demand and optimizing inventory, AI is helping businesses stay ahead of the curve. On top of that, AI-powered language translation tools are breaking down communication barriers with global partners, reducing errors and misunderstandings. In short, AI is making international trade smarter, faster, and far less stressful. Here are five ways of how AI is making international trade smarter, faster, and far less stressful: 1. Automated Customs Compliance Global trade regulations and tariff structures change constantly. AI tools monitor and analyze these changes in real-time, flagging necessary adjustments and mapping their impact on shipments. This ensures businesses remain compliant, avoid penalties, and manage cross-border operations with confidence. 2. Predictive Approaches in Trade Analysis Instead of merely reacting, AI takes a forward-looking view of cross-border trade. By analyzing historical flows, market signals, and regulatory trends, it predicts potential bottlenecks, tariff impacts, and supply chain risks. This predictive lens enables businesses to plan smarter, optimize trade routes, and stay ahead of disruptions. 3. Building Credibility in Exports Trust is currency in international trade. AI helps exporters strengthen credibility by ensuring documentation accuracy, validating records, and reducing inconsistencies. At the same time, AI-driven translation and data checks minimize communication errors with global partners building stronger relationships and increasing acceptance across markets. 4. Streamlined Logistics & Supply Chain Control Cross-border logistics involves multiple stakeholders, documents, and checkpoints – making it vulnerable to errors or inefficiencies. AI optimizes shipping routes, chooses the most efficient transport modes, and detects anomalies in shipments or payments. The result: faster clearance, reduced transit costs, and more reliable deliveries. 5. Sanction Party Screening & Risk Management Fraud and compliance risks remain major concerns in global trade. AI strengthens defenses by screening against sanction party lists, identifying high-risk entities, and monitoring transactions for unusual activity. Businesses gain a proactive safeguard protecting themselves from regulatory exposure and reputational damage. AI is no longer just a tech buzzword, it’s a strategic advantage for global businesses. By simplifying compliance, improving communication, optimizing supply chains, and mitigating risks, AI empowers companies to navigate cross-border trade with confidence and efficiency. Read More

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Protection Against Harm To Life, Limb and Liberty

In Indian criminal jurisprudence, offences against life, limb and liberty form the cornerstone. It embodies the State’s fundamental duty to safeguard life, bodily integrity, physical autonomy, and personal liberty. These offences spanning across spectrum of the gravest to heinous nature strike at the very heart of human dignity and social order, demanding a robust legal framework to ensure justice, deterrence, and rehabilitation. The total FIRs (First Information Reports) registered in the year 2022 was 58,24,946 for crimes under Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Special & Local Laws (SLL); and among them 32.5% are for offences affecting the human body as per the report of National Crimes Records Bureau (NCRB). Urban areas continue to have higher crime rates when compared to rural areas. The constitutional foundation for protection of life, limb and liberty lies in Article 21 of the Constitution of India, which guarantees the right to life and personal liberty – a right, judicially expanded to include dignity, bodily security, and freedom from physical harm. Articles 14, 15, and 20 further complement this protection by ensuring equality before law, non-discrimination, and safeguards against arbitrary punishment. Criminal law operationalises these guarantees through substantive, procedural, and evidentiary provisions that criminalise acts infringing life, limb, and liberty. The legal response to such crimes has undergone a profound transformation from the fragmented pre-colonial justice systems to the codified Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860, and now to the transformative Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023. “The soul of our criminal justice system must reflect the spirit of our Republic, not the shadows of colonial governance” – Extract from the Parliamentary Debate in 2023 on amending the Indian Penal Code. This article presents a structured commentary on the transition from the IPC to the BNS and relevant legal principles. STATUTORY FRAMEWORK For over 160 years, the IPC’s Chapter XVI, ‘Offences Affecting the Human Body,’ defined how the State would respond when life, limb, and liberty were violated or harmed. Since 2023, Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita, (BNS, 2023) ushers a modernised statutory framework that preserves the substantive core of the IPC while refining its drafting, structure, and penalties based on contemporary realities. It adopts a graded punishment structure based on severity and culpability, thereby upholding public order, human dignity and evidentiary rules remain responsive to evolving forms of violence, advances in technology, and the expectations of victims. Historical Background and Evolution of the IPC Historically, India’s criminal justice system was a fragmented amalgamation of religious, customary, and colonial laws and marked by inconsistency and bias. This includes justice delivery in terms of Manusmriti, Yajnavalkya Smriti, Arthashastra or Sharia. Among tribal communities, justice was administered through unwritten customs, community mediation, and compensation in the form of livestock, land, or goods. The arrival of the British East India Company in the seventeenth century introduced partial codification, most notably through the Cornwallis Code of 1793 in Bengal, which sought uniformity but retained the elements of religious law for personal matters. Punishments for similar offences varied drastically between regions, undermining fairness and public trust. This patchwork system created inconsistency and administrative inefficiency. The consolidation of British rule promoted the need for a uniform penal law to ensure consistency, fairness, and effective governance drawing from English common law, the Napoleonic Code, and utilitarian principles. In 1834, the First Law Commission under Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay drafted the IPC, which was passed on 6 October 1860 and came into force on 1 January 1862. Comprising 511 sections in 23 chapters, IPC became the comprehensive criminal law framework for British India. Since then, IPC has undergone numerous amendments and few cardinal ones are as given hereunder; Year & Amendment Key Changes Purpose/ Context 1870 Amendment Clarified provisions for abetment (Sections 107-120) – Clarified joint liability (Sections 34, 149) Strengthened accountability for group crimes such as gang-related murders or assaults. 1983 & 1986 Amendments Introduced Section 304B (dowry death) Addressed dowry-related violence and rising incidents of bride-burning, influenced by feminist activism and public outrage. 2013 Amendment (Post-Nirbhaya) Added Sections 326A & 326B (acid attacks) – Expanded definitions of sexual offences Response to 2012 Delhi gang-rape; aimed at stronger protection for women and deterrence against sexual violence. 2018 Amendment Strengthened laws on sexual offences against minors – Alignment with POCSO Act, 2012 Tackled child abuse and exploitation; enhanced penalties and protections. There are several landmark decisions that also shaped up the evolution of IPC. Four such case laws are picturised below; Transition from IPC to BNS, 2023 The Indian Penal Code (IPC), drafted under colonial era in archaic language had significant gaps in addressing modern crimes including cyber offences, victim protection etc. Its punitive focus overlooked rehabilitation, and limited victim rights clashed with contemporary justice principles. The focus was also to deliver justice rather than to penalise i.e., from ‘dand’ to ‘nyay.’ In 2023, the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, (BNS), 2023, was enacted as part of a legal reform trio alongside the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023 and the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 replacing the IPC, CrPC, and Evidence Act respectively. Effective from 1 July 2024, the BNS reduces 511 sections of the erstwhile IPC to 358, uses plain and culturally resonant language, and incorporates gender-neutral and victim-centric provisions. It introduces community service for minor offences, clearer definitions, and new categories such as: By modernising certain terminology, recognising emerging crimes, and embedding restorative justice, the BNS seeks to decolonise India’s criminal law and align it with constitutional ideals and global human rights standards. Significant Legal Principles and Maxims Analysis of The Offences Part A: Homicide & Murder Provisions (100–110 BNS) Culpable Homicide (Section 100 BNS, 2023; IPC Section 299) Murder (Section 101 BNS, 2023; IPC Section 300) Culpable Homicide by Causing Death of Person Other Than Intended (Section 102 BNS, 2023; IPC Section 301) Punishment For over 160 years, the IPC’s Chapter XVI, ‘Offences Affecting the Human Body,’ defined how the State would respond when life, limb, and liberty were violated or harmed. Since 2023, Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita, (BNS, 2023) ushers a modernised statutory framework that preserves the…

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Milestone Systems to Launch Generative AI Plugin for XProtect, Streamlining Video Review and Response

Milestone Systems, a world leading company in data-driven video technology, recently announced a forthcoming generative AI-powered video analytics plug-in for its XProtect® video management software, developed in collaboration with NVIDIA. Designed to help operators contextualize alarms and focus on what truly matters, the new tool automates video review, filters out false alarms, and based on initial findings could reduce up to 30% of operator alarm fatigue. Making Sense of More Video, Faster Today’s video systems capture vast amounts of data, yet reviewing footage remains time consuming and largely manual. Milestone Systems’ new XProtect plug-in addresses this challenge by leveraging generative AI to automatically summarize, contextualize, and validate video content in real time, helping teams respond faster, manage video more efficiently, and effectively reduce operator alarm fatigue. Key capabilities include: The plug-in integrates directly with the XProtect rule engine and is deployable on-premises or in the cloud to support compliance and deployment flexibility. Built on Ethical AI, Powered by Real-World Data This new solution is built on Milestone’s Hafnia Vision Language Model (VLM) trained on 75,000 hours of ethically sourced, real-world video data from either Europe or the US, using NVIDIA Cosmos Curator for data preparation and running either on cloud infrastructure or regional data centers powered by NVIDIA. It leverages the NVIDIA Cosmos Reason VLM, making it one of the most advanced and compliant video AI platforms in the industry. Thomas Jensen, CEO of Milestone Systems, said: “With this new XProtect plug-in, we are making advanced video intelligence accessible to cities, organizations, and operators everywhere who manage traffic systems – helping them unlock new levels of efficiency, safety, and insight. XProtect users will get access to state-of-the-art generative AI capabilities, and our partners will be able to build value on top of those new capabilities now available within XProtect. It truly marks a pivotal step in our mission to transform how the world manages and learns from visual data, responsibly and at scale.” XProtect customers like the cities of Genoa, Italy, and Dubuque, Iowa, are excited to try these new capabilities, leading the way in adopting advanced video intelligence solutions to enhance traffic management. Enabling Ecosystem Innovation with VLM-as-a-Service The plug-in is just the beginning. Milestone is also introducing a VLM as a Service via APIs, allowing developers, integrators, and partners to build their own generative AI solutions regardless of the video management platform in use. Read More

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