Adaptive Face Zooming improves security by enabling visitors to be identified more clearly. 2N, the global market leader in internet-enabled intercoms and access control systems, has become the first company to introduce adaptive Face Zooming to its video intercoms. Adaptive Face Zooming improves security by enabling homeowners and users in commercial buildings to identify visitors more clearly.
Adaptive Face Zooming is based on the camera in the intercom detecting the face in the frame and zooming in so that the user can identify their visitor on the answering unit or smartphone. This adds particular value when video intercoms are equipped with a wide-angle camera, which are becoming a standard feature of sophisticated video door entry systems. While wide-angle cameras give a perfect overview of the whole entrance, the visitor can occupy a relatively small space in the frame, making the face difficult to recognise.
When two people are in the frame, the video intercom adapts its field of view and automatically focuses on both visitors. If more people enter, the video intercom zooms out to focus all of the visitors in the frame – or back in if any visitors walk away.
If users need to zoom in even further – perhaps to confirm the details on an ID badge – there is also the pinch-to-zoom function, allowing them to zoom in even further.
Adaptive Face Zooming is available on the 2N® IP Style, the company’s flagship video intercom. The 2N® IP Style already has the best camera on the market. Its 5MPx camera’s incorporation of Wide Dynamic Range (WDR) technologies ensures full image quality and identification of the visitor, even in darkness or uneven lighting conditions outside. Adaptive Face Zooming only enhances the ability of the user to see what is happening outside the door. It also works on all of 2N’s answering units, and on smartphones via the My2N app.
Adaptive Face Zooming is not facial recognition technology – it only detects faces, it does not save them – so there are no concerns about General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) rules covering biometric data. The protection of personal data has been a challenge for some forms of biometric access control, but it does not affect this new feature.
Michael Nicholson, 2N’s Business Development Manager for the UK & Ireland, said: “2N is leading the way when it comes to innovation in access control, and the introduction of adaptive Face Zooming is another first for the company. It matters because it makes it easier for homeowners and people in commercial buildings to be certain who they are talking to through the intercom – and that improves security.”