All Content from Business Insider 06月21日 18:01
This AI security tech alerts store staff if it thinks you're trying to steal something
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

巴黎人工智能初创公司Veesion开发了一种手势识别算法,用于预测商店盗窃行为。该技术通过分析现有监控摄像头视频,识别可疑动作并向安保人员发出警报,从而帮助零售商预防盗窃。Veesion的技术已部署在欧洲、加拿大和美国的5000家商店,并获得了4300万美元的B轮融资,用于进一步拓展美国市场。与传统安保措施相比,Veesion的技术不依赖个人特征,更注重行为分析,避免了偏见和隐私问题。该技术不仅能有效阻止盗窃,还能减少员工盗窃,提升顾客购物体验。

🧐 Veesion的核心技术是手势识别算法,它通过分析现有监控摄像头视频,识别并标记可疑动作,从而预测潜在的盗窃行为。该算法不依赖于个人特征,而是关注于人们的动作,避免了偏见和隐私问题。

💡 Veesion的技术部署在5000家商店,覆盖欧洲、加拿大和美国。据Veesion称,使用该技术的商店可以将库存损失率降低一半。该公司最近获得了4300万美元的B轮融资,用于拓展美国市场。

🛡️ 除了打击盗窃,Veesion的技术还可以减少员工盗窃,并探索其他零售应用,例如检测自助结账时的不当扫描和跌倒事件。Veesion认为,该技术不仅能阻止盗窃,还能起到威慑作用,减少盗窃的再次发生。

🛍️ 许多零售商为了应对盗窃问题,采取了锁住商品或限制购物方式的措施,但这种方法可能会导致销售额下降和顾客体验恶化。Veesion的技术通过叠加在现有的安全摄像头基础设施上,提醒员工注意特定风险行为,从而帮助创造更愉快的购物体验。

A demo image of a person concealing an item in a store aisle, as detected by Veesion's AI.

One of the best ways to deal with shoplifting is to prevent it from happening in the first place.

That's the goal of Paris-based AI startup Veesion, which has developed an algorithm that can recognize gestures to predict potential retail theft incidents.

"I happen to have an uncle in Paris that runs and operates three supermarkets, so I exactly know what shoplifting represents for retailers," cofounder Benoît Koenig told Business Insider.

Veesion said its tech is deployed in 5,000 stores across Europe, Canada, and the US. The startup recently raised a $43 million Series B funding round to further its expansion into the US.

The alarm over shoplifting has subsided somewhat over the past year as retailers and law enforcement have gotten a better grip on the problem. Earnings call mentions of the term "shrink," the industry term for missing inventory, have come down significantly among the major retailers Business Insider tracks, according to data from AlphaSense, an AI research platform.

But even though shoplifting is making fewer headlines (especially compared to retail's splashy new AI capabilities), Koenig said the problem remains a compelling one to tackle with machine learning.

"It's not glamorous, but the ROI is quite direct," he said. "You're going to arrest shoplifters, recover inventory, and save money."

One key difference between Veesion's tech and some other visual security approaches is that it says it doesn't rely on individual tracking or physical characteristics that could raise concerns about bias or personal privacy.

The algorithm doesn't care what you look like, Veesion cofounder Benoît Koenig said. It only cares what you're doing.

"The algorithm doesn't care about what people look like. It just cares about how your body parts move over time," Koenig said.

The system analyzes footage from the existing security camera network to detect humans in the picture, identify their movements, and recognize various objects, such as merchandise, carts, baskets, or bags.

If a movement is deemed suspicious, a video clip is flagged and sent to store security personnel, who can then investigate or intervene. Security teams can update the app with additional details about whether the alert was necessary, whether a theft was stopped, or how much a stolen item was worth.

Koenig said more than 85% of alerts are marked as relevant for the store operators using the Veesion system. He said one US client was able to cut their losses from the health and beauty section in half in the first three months of implementation.

Many US retailers have responded to the shoplifting problem by locking up items or limiting the ways people can shop, but that approach increasingly appears to be backfiring in the form of declining sales and worsening customer experiences.

"Retailers have implemented a number of security measures — many to the detriment of the shopping experience — to protect merchandise from theft and to keep their employees and customers safe," the National Retail Federation said in a December report on retail crime.

By layering onto a store's existing security camera infrastructure and alerting staff to specific risky behavior, Veesion says its tech can help create a more pleasant shopping trip.

This is a demo of the alert that store security personnel receive when Veesion's system detects a person concealing an item.

Koenig said the tech can also help reduce employee theft, which industry groups estimate costs retailers as much as shoplifting does.

"It has an internal deterrent effect," Koenig said. "They know there is an AI in the cameras, so they're going to be careful with what they do."

There are further retail use-cases that Veesion is exploring too, including improper scans at self-checkout to slip-and-fall detection.

For now, Koenig said the tech is not just effective at detecting and disrupting would-be shoplifters — it also deters them from coming back. "This is much more than just recovering a few bucks," he said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

Veesion 人工智能 盗窃预防 零售科技
相关文章