logo
How AI Has Started Sorting Through Your Home Security Videos

How AI Has Started Sorting Through Your Home Security Videos

Yahoo23-02-2025

A new tech feature is on the rise in home security video and it's all about the latest AI capabilities. These AI tricks could make some users uncomfortable, while greatly improving the experience for others.
The new feature is intelligent video searching, or the ability for advanced AIs like Gemini, Apple Intelligence and others to review recorded home security footage, analyze it and then explain it when users have specific questions.
What does that mean if you have a security camera? A lot -- when used correctly. When we asked Tete Xiao, CEO and co-founder of startup Prompt AI, about how these features can be used, he replied, "Home AI could enable language-based notifications and conversations about what's happening at home in real-time. You can get insights such as which delivery service came by, whether the dog was fed and if suspicious activity was detected around your house. You could even ask what your kids did after school or if specific people it recognizes stopped by."
Let's go over everything you should know about this new technology.
Read more: I Thought I'd Hate AI in Home Security. I Couldn't Have Been More Wrong
Home security cameras are triggered by motion detection and object recognition. While there are ways to cut down on the triggers and associated alerts you get, cameras still tend to pick up lots of action, especially in a busy home. That adds up to a lot of footage to look through.
Most of this footage isn't very important -- until it suddenly is. If you want to find the details or where a pet ran off to, why an expected package disappeared or another key event, you may have to sift through a day of triggered motion recordings (or longer, depending on the scenario). That's a headache. AI video searches have come to security cameras to make it easier.
These allow you to type in a quick question or use a voice assistant to ask about specific objects and people. The search function will then scan all related video recordings and summarize them in a text answer so you can get the details you need. It's a bit like how AI can summarize long text chains for you, but applied to videos.
This new wave of AI technology refers to machine learning algorithms like LLMs (large language models) that are capable of assimilating a ton of human "language" and replicating it. Those languages include not only what we speak or type (think ChatGPT), but the way we identify objects in paintings, use logic to figure out problems and share ideas via mathematics or coding.
So these kinds of home searches have been trained to identify all kinds of common objects found in security videos, then put that identification together into a cohesive explanation that makes sense to humans. Combine that with their ability to understand even casual questions and you can get a specific answer without hunting through video yourself -- at least, when everything works right.
It may seem like a strange use of AI at first, but we do run into home and family situations where it can be useful. One of Google's examples is asking "Did the kids leave their bikes in the driveway again?" with Gemini reporting back that the kids had left their bikes in the driveway several times this week. Of course, this kind of snitching works with all kinds of toys or belongings from pets or children.
Homeowners may also want answers to questions like, "Did a UPS truck stop by today?" "Where did the cat go?" "Where did I leave the keys" or "Did the dog jump up on the sofa today?" Others may want the details about, "Every visitor who opened the door today," or info on "a red car that stopped by on March 3," and so on.
Many of these AIs also have the ability to give broad summaries of what happened, security-wise, during the day or weekend. Add face recognition technology and they may be able to answer questions about certain people, like, "Did Aunt Marge come knocking today?"
We've seen these kinds of AI searches offered by Google Home in combo with its Gemini AI, as well as Ring (currently in beta), Wyze and a number of third-party AI platforms with more on the way. There are signs Amazon's Alexa is starting to enter a similar era. While Arlo doesn't have AI searches, it is working on particularly advanced, customizable object detection. Even pet cams like Furbo's subscription cam are using AI to understand and report on what pets are doing. Eventually, we expect AI searches to arrive at nearly every security brand that offers video storage.
Not usually. These features aren't really housed in cameras, so any newer security camera that works with the brand's app should benefit from these AI searches. Some brands may list specific exceptions: Ring, for example, warns its search won't work with cams like the Ring Edge or Ring Alarm Pro.
However, with searches like these it's a good idea to have a series of cameras around or inside your home, so they can analyze and track things from multiple angles to provide more complete explanations.
You probably won't have to pay any extra fees specifically for an AI search add-on. However, this AI functionality is typically bundled into higher-tier security subscription services and often requires cloud video storage. If you aren't paying for a subscription right now, you will likely need a subscription (and its monthly fee) like Nest Aware or Ring Home Premium to enable AI searches.
In our testing it has performed adequately so far. Modern AIs do have their struggles with hallucinations and misinformation, but they seem to do better with relatively straight object recognition and explanations about what it has seen in video. It doesn't always get all the details right or tell every bit of important info, but it works to track objects and answer basic questions about what it has seen. Of course, like all LLMs there's lot of potential for improvement as video AI search training is refined. That brings us to another important point…
It's normal to have some privacy questions about AI, and this field is so new in home security that we're still learning about the risks ourselves. AIs generally want lots of information to train on, and using AI features in home cams typically gives the company permission to use your video footage for AI training.
Since the footage analyzed is generally kept in the cloud, it may also be more vulnerable to security flaws and employee abuse as well.
However, there are usually ways to turn AI assistants like Gemini off entirely or to avoid participating in the video AI search. You do not have to use these search features, but the companies offering them will be looking for ways to analyze your video footage any way they can. We do have options for video cameras without subscriptions if this all makes you nervous.
Some companies are more focused on privacy than others. Tete Xiao of Prompt AI noted that, with its home security platforms, "We never train on user data without explicit permission, and even then, we do not use personal details—period. We also give users the ability to permanently delete their data from our platform at any time" Look for signs like these if you're concerned about privacy.
If you want to learn even more, check out our guide on if the police can seize your home security footage and the absolute worst spots to put security cameras.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

For iPadOS 26, Apple invents something called 'Windows'
For iPadOS 26, Apple invents something called 'Windows'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

For iPadOS 26, Apple invents something called 'Windows'

Apple announced a ton of new features at its annual Worldwide Developers Conference, including personalized backgrounds and customizable emoji, a new design language called Liquid Glass, and the macOS 26 update, "Tahoe." Among those exciting new updates are a ton of changes to the iPad, coming this fall in iPadOS 26. "iPadOS 26 is our biggest iPadOS release ever, with powerful features that take the experience to the next level and transform what users can do on iPad," Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of Software Engineering, said in a press release. "With a beautiful new design, an entirely new powerful and intuitive windowing system, even more features powered by Apple Intelligence, huge improvements to working with files, and new capabilities for creatives to power their workflows, iPadOS 26 makes our most versatile device even more capable." So, what changes are coming to your iPad with iPadOS 26? It's not just a new look, even if that was the main focus at WWDC 2025. Here's everything you need to know about the new iPad updates announced at Apple's 2025 WWDC. Featured Video For You WWDC 2025: Everything revealed in 10 minutes SEE ALSO: Apple WWDC 2025 keynote event: live updates Did someone say Windows? Credit: Apple Windows, Apple style. Credit: Apple If you didn't expect an Apple event to talk about Windows so much, you're not alone. And yet — they really couldn't stop saying it. iPadOS 26 gives users the ability to play around with app windows, including being able to resize them, drag and place them on the screen, close, minimize, and tile them. And the new menu bar makes it even easier to navigate through all those windows. Meet Liquid Glass, Apple's new look. Credit: Apple At WWDC 2025, Apple introduced Liquid Glass, a new visual aesthetic that brings more glass-like and translucent features to your display. Liquid Glass is one of the biggest redesigns in recent Apple history, and so far the Mashable hive mind seems to be in favor of the new look. Not only can you customize the appearance of widgets and other elements on the display, but you can also make them clear, creating the illusion of additional space on the screen. This translucent design appears in all sorts of ways across iPadOS 26, as well as in iOS 26 and macOS 26. Translucent elements will become much more common with Liquid Glass. Credit: Apple Apple Intelligence is bringing Live Translation to your iPad in Phone, FaceTime, and Messages — just like it did to your iPhone. You can create new custom Genmoji thanks to Apple Intelligence, for example. You can even use ChatGPT to create new Contact Posters and other images for your Apple tablet. Of course, WWDC 2025 included a ton more Apple Intelligence updates (just not as much as some Apple fans would have liked). Files gets a face lift Credit: WWDC 2025 As part of the new Liquid Glass personalization options, your Files widget is getting a makeover. A newly enhanced Files app makes it easier for users to identify folders, customize folders with colors, icons, and emojis, and drag them onto the Doc in iPadOS 26. If you love Preview on your MacBook, we have great news for you: The app is finally coming to your iPad, making it way easier to mark up PDFs without the rigmarole of using a separate app. The calculator app is bringing 3D graphics to Math Notes, and users now have the ability to import and export notes in the Notes app into a markdown file. In a footnote in the official press release, Apple only says that the new iPad software features will be available "as a free software update" in the fall. Assuming we don't get any new iPad releases later this year, that means iPadOS 26 will be coming to the following devices: iPad Pro (M4), iPad Pro 12.9-inch (3rd gen and later), iPad Pro 11-inch (1st gen and later), iPad Air (M2 and later), iPad Air (3rd gen and later), iPad (A16), iPad (8th gen and later), iPad mini (A17 Pro), and iPad mini (5th gen and later). However, Apple Intelligence features will only be available with devices running Apple's M series silicon chips.

Everything we learned during Apple's WWDC 2025 keynote
Everything we learned during Apple's WWDC 2025 keynote

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Everything we learned during Apple's WWDC 2025 keynote

Apple's 2025 Worldwide Developers Conference keynote was sparse on the kind of groundbreaking announcements it's usually known for. With no major hardware reveals until September and no pressure to wade into undercooked tech categories like AI or augmented reality, the Silicon Valley giant went back to basics. The message was clear: iOS needs an update. That was the crux of this year's keynote, with Apple CEO Tim Cook and Senior VP Craig Federighi diving deep into the all-new iOS 26 redesign, dubbed Liquid Glass. Apple also confirmed it's introducing a new naming convention for all of Apple's software platforms, aimed at aligning with the company's vision for the future. While Apple Intelligence and AI weren't the headline act, the OS does include new AI features that will hopefully spark some enthusiasm among consumers. According to a new survey by CNET, just 11 percent of US consumers upgrade their phones for AI features. From live translations to music tools and Safari enhancements, AI is embedded across the system, even if it feels a bit reactionary following the Google I/O 2025 keynote, which was all AI, AI, and more AI. iOS 26, along with updates across Apple's hardware operating systems, brings a mix of big swings and incremental upgrades. Here's a full breakdown of everything announced at WWDC 2025, including iOS 26, iPadOS 26, macOS 26, tvOS 26, and WatchOS 26. And let's start with... Good enough, welcome back Windows Vista. Credit: Apple Apple's new visual style is called Liquid Glass, and the translucent UI marks Apple's most significant visual overhaul in years. It keeps the core layout familiar but introduces a suite of subtle quality-of-life improvements designed to make navigation smoother and more intuitive. 'Expressive' was the word Federighi leaned on to describe the new look, with demos showcasing apps that appear to float in space — a design language clearly borrowing from the spatial interface of Vision Pro. That spatiality now filters down to iPhone, giving everything a slick, responsive, and notably fluid feel. This includes an updated Dark Mode and an all-new Clear theme — Apple's take on a fully translucent UI that somehow feels modern, minimal, and a rich man's version of Windows Vista. It's a noticeable shift that brings a handful of thoughtful features. Nothing revolutionary, but enough to make you pause and think, okay, that's pretty clever. Credit: Apple In one of the more genuinely useful Apple Intelligence features for everyday users, Live Translations are now integrated into Messages, FaceTime, and other core apps. It's arguably the flagship AI-driven feature in iOS 26. Apple says the real-time translations are processed entirely on-device and can even mimic the user's voice during translation — a technical flex that's impressive, if slightly uncanny. The feature also extends to music, with support for real-time lyric translations and live pronunciation to help users sing along. How seamless it all feels in practice remains to be seen. The Phone app is getting a streamlined new layout that brings Favorites, Recents, and Voicemails into a single, unified view. Building on the existing Live Voicemail feature, Apple is also introducing Call Screening, which prompts unknown callers to explain why they're calling, giving you the chance to decide whether it's worth your time. Apple wants to give you your time back. Credit: Apple The standout addition, though, is Hold Assist. When you're stuck waiting for a live agent, your iPhone will now alert you the moment a real person picks up. A small upgrade, but a smart one. Photos are finally — finally — getting the visual "overhaul" it desperately needed. The app has been a mess since iOS 18, when Apple turned what was a perfectly functional interface into something oddly convoluted, burying albums and making navigation a chore. Credit: Apple With iOS 26, Photos is being restructured around two main tabs: one for your full photo library and the other for your collections. Apple is framing it as a sleek, modern redesign, but really, it's a return to the pre-iOS 18 layout, just better looking. It's a reinvention of the wheel, sure, but at least it's a wheel that actually rolls. Credit: Apple Group chats are getting a solid quality-of-life update in iOS 26, with the addition of Apple Pay integration and built-in Polls. It's a small but meaningful upgrade that makes coordinating with friends or splitting bills a bit more seamless. Messages is also getting smarter about unknown numbers, automatically sorting them into a separate folder. From there, you can mark them as known, request more info, or delete them entirely. Which is particularly useful for online daters navigating their talking stage graveyard. Now integrated with Apple Intelligence, the app will now suggest creating a poll when it detects that a decision needs to be made, and works in tandem with Image Playground for generating custom backgrounds to personalize your chats. The new design for CarPlay introduces a compact view for incoming calls, so drivers can see who's calling without losing sight of critical info like navigation directions. Credit: Apple Messages in CarPlay now supports Tapbacks and pinned conversations, making it easier to keep track of active chats on the go. Plus, with the addition of widgets and Live Activities, staying informed while driving looks to be more seamless and less distracting. Apple also introduced CarPlay Ultra, an enhanced version of CarPlay designed specifically for its luxury automotive partnerships, starting with Aston Martin. Despite the name sounding like a subscription tier (it's not… at least for now), CarPlay Ultra is touted as a deeper, more immersive integration of Apple's software into the car's entire being. Credit: Apple Instead of being confined to the central infotainment screen, CarPlay Ultra extends across all driver-facing displays, blending iPhone functionality with the vehicle's native systems for a more unified and premium in-car experience. Apple Maps is getting a memory upgrade in iOS 26 with Visited Places, a feature that logs where you've been, like restaurants or shops, and organizes them right in the app. Sure, Google Maps has done this for years, but Apple's finally catching up. Credit: Apple The app also gets smarter about your daily patterns. Using on-device intelligence, iPhone can now recognize regular routes — like your commute — and surface preferred directions, flag traffic delays, and suggest faster options, all from the lock screen. As expected, it raises some privacy flags. But Apple claims both Visited Places and daily route tracking are end-to-end encrypted and can't be accessed by the company itself, though by now, that promise feels more like a standard PR line than a standout feature. Adding to the pile of privacy-adjacent updates, Apple Wallet in iOS 26 now supports Digital ID for passports, though Apple is quick to note it's not a replacement for your physical passport. You can add it to your Wallet, and it's currently accepted by TSA in 10 states and Puerto Rico. (For context, Digital IDs are recognized in 14 states total, but holdouts like New York and Louisiana use their own apps and don't support Apple Wallet.) Credit: Apple Boarding Passes are also getting smarter with Live Activities integration. They let you share your flight status with friends in real-time, so they know when you land — no group text updates required. Credit: Apple Apple is finally taking mobile gaming more seriously with the new Apple Games app. It pulls everything into one place—a Home tab for updates to the games you actually play, a dedicated section for Apple Arcade, and a Library that tracks every game you've ever downloaded. There's a new 'Play Together' tab for comparing scores, sending invites, and competing in real-time challenges with friends. It works in portrait or landscape, and pairs smoothly with a controller. According to Apple, Safari in iOS 26 is getting a boost in privacy and design. The mobile browser now includes advanced fingerprinting protection while browsing. Visually, Safari adopts a more rounded, edge-to-edge look — web pages now flow seamlessly from the top of the screen to the bottom. iOS 26 brings a wave of meaningful accessibility updates across the Apple ecosystem. Accessibility Reader introduces a customizable, systemwide reading experience tailored to individual needs, while Braille Access delivers a completely rethought interface for users connecting braille displays to iPhone. Apple has also improved features like Live Listen, Background Sounds, and Personal Voice, aiming to make day-to-day device use more intuitive and inclusive. Credit: Apple Apple claims iPadOS 26 is its most ambitious iPad update yet — combining the sleek new Liquid Glass design with deeper productivity features and expanded Apple Intelligence integration. The headline feature for iPadOS 26 is a powerful new Apple "invention" called Windows — an upgrade that finally lets users freely resize, move, and tile apps across their iPad screen. And no, this does not make the iPad just like a Mac. They have different names, after all. Still, it's the closest the iPad has come to feeling like a true multitasking machine, shedding some of the clunky constraints of Split View and Slide Over. It's not macOS, but it's not far off either — just don't say that too loudly in Cupertino. The Files app gets new folder customization and default app settings, and the long-awaited Preview app comes to iPad for editing PDFs and images with Apple Pencil. Creative pros get features like Background Tasks, local capture for recording, and improved audio input tools, while the Journal app, Game Overlay, and a new menu bar round out a packed update focused on making the iPad more capable, personal, and pro-friendly than ever. Credit: Apple macOS 26, now officially named macOS Tahoe, builds out the Mac experience with deeper iPhone integration, smarter system-wide intelligence, and a much beefier Spotlight. The Phone app finally lands on macOS, complete with Call Screening and Hold Assist, while Live Activities can now surface in the menu bar for real-time updates like flights or rides. Credit: Apple Spotlight gets its biggest update yet — it can now execute actions like sending emails or creating notes, and supports filtering, quick keys, and results from third-party cloud services. Apple Intelligence brings on-device Live Translation, smarter Shortcuts, Genmoji customization, and new tools in Image Playground. Credit: Apple A personal favorite from the keynote is the updated Finder, which lets users customize folder icons with colors and symbols, and themes offer more personalized desktop setups. tvOS 26 brings new content features and quality-of-life improvements to the Apple TV experience. Users can now set up individual profiles for personalized recommendations and continue watching across devices. The TV app has been redesigned to prioritize content, with streamlined playback controls that stay out of the way. Credit: Apple Cinematic poster art adds some polish, but, to be honest, the real highlight of the tvOS 26 spotlight was the Apple TV+ preview: Chief of War with Jason Momoa, Foundation season 3, Slow Horses season 5, and a new Denzel Washington film titled Highest to Lowest are all on the way. It's a steady update that Apple intends to be more personal and content-driven. Credit: Apple It kind of feels like Apple's heart just isn't in watchOS anymore, at least based on what was shown at WWDC. The headline feature is Workout Buddy, an AI-powered fitness coach that dishes out real-time encouragement, milestone callouts, and personalized playlists, all voiced by synthetic versions of Fitness+ trainers. The Workout app itself finally gets a much-needed redesign, making it easier to jump into custom routines and access pacing tools without digging through menus. Beyond that, most of what's new in watchOS is inherited directly from iOS 26 — small quality-of-life improvements that round out the experience, but don't exactly move the needle. Good enough. Welcome back 'L.A. Noire." Credit: Apple Finally, to wrap up this round-up, it's VisionOS 26 and Vision Pro — the source of inspiration behind Apple's new Liquid Glass aesthetic and translucent UI design overhaul across its platforms. This year's update doubles down on spatial computing and everyone's "love" for widgets. This includes spatially aware widgets that persist in your physical environment, letting users pin things like clocks, weather, and photos around their space, customizable down to frame depth and color. Apple's also focused on social and collaborative use cases. Users can now share spatial experiences with others in the same room or dial in friends via FaceTime. Safari supports interactive 3D models embedded in web pages, and developers can tap into new APIs to make apps more immersive. That includes Personas, which is getting a — slightly less creepy — glowup. With the help of some "enhanced volumetric rendering," Personas invade your digital space with sharper detail, full side profiles, and more natural motion. And yes, you can still watch movies and play games — because it's still a $3,500 headset, after all.

iOS 26 lets you make custom Genmoji with ChatGPT and emoji
iOS 26 lets you make custom Genmoji with ChatGPT and emoji

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

iOS 26 lets you make custom Genmoji with ChatGPT and emoji

Apple's new iPhone operating system could seriously change the way you use emoji and Genmoji. The tech giant announced and previewed iOS 26 on Monday during its highly anticipated keynote address at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). There was lots of news: a total redesign, new Maps tools, and new spam-blocking tools, to name a few. Tucked into that waterfall of news was a big change to Genmoji and emoji. In short: You'll soon have more ability to customize your Genmoji with ChatGPT and by combining emoji. The new iOS will allow users to "mix together emoji and combine them with descriptions to create something new," Apple wrote in a press release. Apple, for example, showed off what looked like an emoji sloth discovering a good sure, OK. Credit: Apple Apple also noted that iOS 26 will allow users to employ ChatGPT to customize their images and emoji. It showed, for instance, that in Image Playground users can make emoji (or images) stylized in different ways using the AI tool. An image of a beach ball, for instance, could be made to look like it was an oil painting. Credit: Apple These tools seemed to be aimed at spicing up your group chats. Gone are the days of a simple :) it would seem.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store