Protect the people.
Never the identity.
Most crowd-monitoring tech is camera-first, which means face-first, which means privacy-last. We count presence, not identity — a number per zone, updated every second, with nothing on disk that can identify a single person in it.
Live per-zone occupancy, updated every second. Operators see compression building before it becomes dangerous.
Coverage where cameras can't go — through walls, floors, ceilings. No blind spots, no line-of-sight problems.
No faces, no IDs, no recordings. Auditable by design — what we don't capture, we can't leak.
Sensing without watching. Counting without identifying.
Wireless signals already pass through your building. We read the way they bounce off bodies — that’s presence. Nothing more. No image, no face, no name, ever.
Presence sensed through walls, floors and ceilings. Reads the disturbance bodies make in the wireless field — never an image.
Anonymous count of how many bodies are in a zone, derived from RF pattern only. No phones, no MACs, no usernames touched.
Optional asset tagging where consent is explicit — wristbands at events, lanyards in hospitals — never linked to a person without permission.
Compression rates flagged in real time, stopped-movement alerts in care settings, capacity tipping points raised before they breach.
Same brain. Different sites.
Count the crowd. Protect the person. Never confuse the two.