Mira began to write queries that nudged the firmware toward a different set of priorities. She trained a small classifier — not to override the vendor’s models but to weight their decisions differently. Where the baseline firmware favored patterns that matched prior incidents, Mira's classifier lifted anomalies that suggested vulnerability: prolonged stillness on a bench, repeated visits to a stairwell at dawn, a change in someone's daily routine. She pushed an update into her sandbox and watched the cameras’ outputs rebalance.
"We are moving from passive recording to active deterrence," said a CP Plus spokesperson regarding the update. "The new firmware allows our hardware to better distinguish between routine movement, like swaying trees, and genuine security threats, reducing false alarms by up to 90%."
Your CP Plus security system is like a loyal guard dog. It sits quietly, watches over your home, and barks (sends alerts) when something is wrong. But even the best guard dog needs training to learn new tricks and vaccinations to stay healthy.