Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Eyeforce is a remote video guarding provider under Becklar. Its core focus is not simply “recording footage for evidence,” but turning on-site cameras into remote security guards that can actively intervene. Its solution combines video surveillance, analytics-based alerts, two-way audio, remote human verification, and law-enforcement coordination to help prevent intrusions, theft, vandalism, and on-site safety risks.
In terms of protection types, Eyeforce covers video intervention, remote guarding, 24/7 live monitoring, remote gate access, remote escort, compliance patrols, panic/suspicious-situation assistance, and lone-worker safety checks. Deployment relies on on-site cameras, internet-based video transmission, infrared lighting, speakers or two-way audio, with staff at a command and control center reviewing live feeds or playback. The alert workflow is relatively clear: when the analytics system detects movement in restricted areas or suspicious activity, it triggers an alert; remote guards then verify and identify the situation, first using on-site audio warnings to deter intruders, and escalating to law enforcement or relevant contacts when necessary. Its compliance component mainly involves workplace inspections and reporting, such as PPE-wearing audits, though the main content does not list specific certifications.
The official website does not publish plans or unit pricing. It only emphasizes that costs are significantly lower than traditional security guards and that solutions are customized to customer needs. Integration capability is one of its selling points: the site mentions integration with proactive video monitoring, intrusion detection, access-control credential verification, two-way audio, and Becklar’s broader ecosystem for enterprise monitoring, workforce safety, and personal health and safety. Becklar’s network includes 9 call centers across the United States and Canada and serves more than 1.7 million subscribers, which is a plus for redundancy and support.
The strengths are strong proactive deterrence, making it suitable for large, poorly lit, remote, or high-risk nighttime sites; human review helps reduce false alarms; and its use cases extend beyond theft prevention to personnel safety and compliance checks. The downsides are the lack of disclosed pricing, SLA details, contract terms, data-retention policies, and specific certifications. Effectiveness also depends heavily on on-site hardware, network conditions, and local law-enforcement response. It is better suited to physical locations in North America such as car dealerships, construction sites, logistics parks, corporate campuses, retail locations, and hotels.
The main content provides no information about access from China, and payment methods are not disclosed. Given that its address, phone number, service network, and law-enforcement coordination are all heavily oriented toward the U.S. market, deployment for Chinese users may be affected by network connectivity, time zones, on-site integration, and local compliance restrictions. Domestic alternatives to evaluate include Hikvision, Uniview, and Dahua Technology for intelligent video security solutions. For international cloud video security platforms, consider comparing Verkada, Avigilon, and Eagle Eye Networks.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on eyeforce.com official site.
eyeforce.com is an United States Security provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach eyeforce.com directly.