Skip to main content

Videalert upgrades video platform for other enforcement providers

Videalert has added new functionality to its Digital Video Platform to simultaneously support the enforcement of diverse civil traffic contraventions, traffic management and community safety applications. The platform is designed with the intention of allowing councils to take a phased approach to migrating from existing systems to help extend the Return on Investment of assets and reduce support costs.
February 21, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
7513 Videalert has added new functionality to its Digital Video Platform to simultaneously support the enforcement of diverse civil traffic contraventions, traffic management and community safety applications. The platform is designed with the intention of allowing councils to take a phased approach to migrating from existing systems to help extend the Return on Investment of assets and reduce support costs.


This solution can now be integrated with mobile enforcement vehicles from third party suppliers such as Traffic Environment Systems and Cohort company 662 SEA. It can also be applied to Videalerts new analytics engine and its upgraded Evidence Pack Review Suite.

The analytics engine is equipped with algorithms that provide additional layers of intelligence to improve the evidence capture process. It is said to increase detection rates and reduce false alerts to deliver enhanced levels of productivity at a low operating cost. Videalert’s Evidence Pack Review Suite features new fields that display more detailed Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency data. It also allows reviewers to add notes that explain the reasons that Penalty Charge Notices have been issued in borderline cases to help accelerate the evidence pack review process.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Free-flow upgrade to Holland's Westerschelde tunnel's toll system
    February 1, 2012
    Unbroken service Technolution's Winifred Roggekamp and Dave Marples describe efforts to upgrade the Westerscheldetunnel's tolling system to give free-flow capability. Until 2003 the Flanders region of Zeeland, in the south-west of the Netherlands, was connected to the mainland only by ferry. The new Westerscheldetunnel, a 6.6km toll tunnel, improves communications with the region considerably, taking some 100km off the alternative road journey. In 2006 it was recognised that the toll plaza for the tunnel ne
  • Polarisation is glaringly obvious, says Sony
    December 3, 2018
    Glare from the sun is a factor in a large number of road accidents – many of them fatal. But there is a solution at hand: using polarisation can mitigate the effect of glare and improve ITS camera enforcement, explains Stephane Clauss The effect of glare on driver safety has been well documented. A 2013 UK study by the country’s largest driver organisation, the AA, calculated sun glare was a contributing cause in almost 3,000 road accidents in 2012 alone. This represented one in 33 accidents on Britain’s
  • Mexico City seeks solutions to improve air quality
    December 6, 2017
    David Crawford ponders prospects for one of the world’s most congested and polluted cities. In 1992, the United Nations named Mexico City as the world’s most polluted urban centre. In the first half of 2016, following the updating of pollution alert limits to meet international standards, Mexico recorded 115 days where ozone concentrations exceeded the acute exposure health limit.
  • Smart Spanish city trials cell-based traffic management
    November 7, 2013
    David Crawford reports on an urban electronic nervous system. The northern Spanish city of Santander – historically a port - is now an emerging technology showcase attracting global attention as a prototype for a medium-sized smart city of the future. In a move to determine the optimal use of available data, it is creating a de-facto experimental laboratory for sensor and mobile phone-based urban traffic management and environmental monitoring innovations.