Courthouses & Government Buildings

Protecting courthouse & government buildings in real time

Many courts and government buildings still rely on outdated and inadequate technologies that have failed to meet their security needs and protect their personnel. Smart surveillance technology is increasingly being adopted in courthouses around the world as a security measure to maintain the safety of courthouse staff, court visitors, lawyers, and witnesses.

Take advantage of modern facial and body recognition technologies to protect the perimeter, entrances and court rooms, ensuring only authorized personnel and litigants have secure access to government facilities.

Download Our Courthouses & Government Buildings Brief

real time facial recognition and access control for courthouses

Access Control

While security guards and basic weapons detection are basic necessities for the courtroom, secure biometric-access control technologies help lock down all entrances so that only the people that need to be present are given authorized access – and no one else.

Real-time Video Surveillance

Ensuring the physical safety of anyone who visits your government facility or courthouse is of utmost importance. Facial recognition identifies known security threats in real-time which allows your security team to be more proactive in addressing on-premise threats.

Cost-Effective Options

Leverage your existing camera infrastructure, access control systems, and edge-based options to dramatically lower your total cost of ownership by reducing the dependence on heavy hardware and GPUs which are often required to perform real-time video analytics.

Book a demo to learn more.

Let an Oosto expert show you how to better protect your people, profits, and premises through the power of Vision AI. Available via cloud, on-premise, or SDK.

Beyond the Fence:
Proactive Perimeter Security with Video Analytics
Beyond the Fence:
Proactive Perimeter Security with Video Analytics
INTRODUCING
Innovation Obsessed
| A Podcast by Oosto
INNOVATION OBSESSED
A Podcast by Oosto