
For all the progress in artificial intelligence, most video security systems still fail at recognising context in real-world conditions. The majority of cameras can capture real-time footage, but struggle to interpret it. This is a problem turning into a growing concern for smart city designers, manufacturers and schools, each of which may depend on AI to keep people and property safe.
Lumana, an AI video surveillance company, believes the fault in these systems lies deep in the foundations of how they are built. “Traditional video platforms were created decades ago to record footage, not interpret it,” said Jordan Shou, Lumana’s Vice President of Marketing. “Adding AI on top of outdated infrastructure is like putting a smart chip in a rotary phone. It might function, but it will never be truly intelligent or reliable enough to understand what’s being captured or help teams make smarter real-time decisions.”
Big consequences
When traditional video security systems layer AI on older infrastructure, false alerts and performance issues arise. Alerts and missed detections are not just technical hiccups, but risks that can have devastating consequences. Shou points to a recent case where a school surveillance system, which used an AI add-on for gun detection, misidentified a harmless object for a weapon, setting off an unnecessary police response.
“Every mistake, whether it’s a missed event or a false alert, which leads to improper response, erodes trust,” he said. “It wastes time, money, and can traumatise people who did nothing wrong.”
Errors can also be costly. Each false alarm forces teams to pause real work and investigate, a process that can drain millions from public safety and operational budgets every year.
Building a smarter foundation
Instead of layering AI on top of old video security frameworks, Lumana rebuilt the infrastructure itself with an all-in-one platform that combines modern video security hardware, software, and proprietary AI. The company’s hybrid-cloud design connects any security camera to GPU-powered processors and adaptive AI models that operate at the edge – meaning they are located as close as possible to where the footage is captured.
The result, Shou says, is faster performance and more accurate analysis. Each camera becomes a continuous-learning device that improves over time, understanding motion, behaviour, and patterns unique to its environment.
“The issue is that most of today’s video surveillance systems use static, off-the-shelf AI models that were only designed to work in specific environments. AI shouldn’t need a perfect lab environment to work,” Shou explained. “It should work in real-world conditions and adapt based on the video data that’s coming in. That’s why, when customers compare Lumana to their existing or other AI systems, the difference and performance gaps are immediately clear.”
The company’s design also prioritises privacy. All data is encrypted, governed by access controls, and compliant with SOC 2, HIPAA, and NDAA standards. Customers can disable facial or biometric tracking if they choose. “Our focus is on actions, not identities,” Shou said.
Real-world use cases
Lumana’s systems have been deployed in several industries. One of its most visible projects is with JKK Pack, a 24-hour packaging manufacturer that uses security cameras to monitor safety and operational efficiency in its facilities.
Before Lumana’s deployment, cameras only recorded incidents for later review, which led to missed events and reactive incident response. After the upgrade, the same hardware could detect unsafe movements, equipment faults, or manufacturing bottlenecks in real-time. The company reported 90% faster investigations and alerts delivered in under a second which dramatically improved response to safety incidents, without replacing a single camera.
In another deployment, a grocery retailer integrated Lumana’s AI into its existing camera network to flag unusual point-of-sale activity, like repeat voids, and to correlate those events with visual evidence. The system reduced shrinkage and improved employee accountability by providing real-world examples of policy violations.
Beyond manufacturing, Lumana’s system has been used at large public events, in restaurants, and for municipal operations. In cities, it helps identify illegal dumping and fires; in quick-service chains, it monitors kitchen safety and food handling.
A broader push for reliable AI video security
Lumana’s work comes at a time when accuracy and accountability are replacing speed as the top priorities for enterprise AI. A recent study from F5 found that only 2% of companies consider themselves fully ready to scale AI, with governance and data security cited as the main challenges.
That caution is reflected in the market, with analysts warning that as AI takes on more decision-making, systems must remain “auditable, transparent, and free from bias.”
Lumana’s architecture echoes the call for accountability, blending performance and control with data governance and cybersecurity in an easy-to-deploy solution that enhances existing security camera infrastructure, helping organisations extract immediate value from AI video.
The next step in machine vision
Shou said Lumana’s next stage of development aims to move from detection and understanding to predicting.
“The next evolution of AI video will be about reasoning,” he said. “The ability to grasp context in real time, provide actionable and impactful insights from the video data collected, will change how we think about safety, operations, and awareness.”
For Lumana, the goal is not just teaching AI how to see better, but to help it understand what it is seeing and letting those who rely on that video data to make smarter, faster decisions.
Image source: Unsplash

