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Eluviant launches Aurora Flow AI for video surveillance

Eluviant launches Aurora Flow AI for video surveillance

Thu, 16th Jul 2026 (Today)
Joseph Gabriel Lagonsin
JOSEPH GABRIEL LAGONSIN News Editor

Eluviant has launched Aurora Flow, a generative artificial intelligence model for enterprise video surveillance that is already in use in live deployments.

The product is designed to analyse CCTV footage from multiple cameras in near real time and can operate in isolated environments without external network connectivity. It focuses on understanding sequences of actions and events rather than assessing individual frames in isolation.

The launch coincides with a rebrand for the business, previously known as IntelexVision. Founded in 2017, Eluviant has spent years building video intelligence tools for large organisations using existing camera networks.

Aurora Flow extends the company's existing platform, which combines an unsupervised self-learning system with a vision-language model called Aurora. Eluviant said Aurora has been used in live alert decision-making for the past 18 months.

The latest model is aimed at environments where security teams need to identify complex behaviours as they unfold. Examples include equipment tampering, unsafe climbing and dangerous driving.

Behaviour analysis

Traditional video analytics systems have often focused on object recognition or isolated incidents within a single image. Aurora Flow is intended for situations where meaning depends on movement and context over time, such as theft, fighting or climbing.

The approach reflects a wider shift in the surveillance market toward systems that help human operators narrow down footage that may require urgent review. Businesses and public sector organisations are also looking to extract more operational data from camera networks originally installed for security monitoring.

Eluviant said its tools are used across retail, critical infrastructure, construction and smart cities. Its systems are deployed on more than 50,000 camera feeds across five continents, and customers include Airbus, DP World, Prosegur and Vodafone.

Eluviant also works with more than 60 technology and commercial partners. It did not disclose financial terms related to the launch or name customers using Aurora Flow.

New identity

The change from IntelexVision to Eluviant marks a broader repositioning around generative artificial intelligence and video intelligence. The company framed the rebrand as part of its next phase after building its earlier surveillance analytics business under the former name.

Callum Wilson, Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer of Eluviant, described the product as a step beyond earlier forms of monitoring software.

"We believe Aurora Flow is a frontier AI model in surveillance and a step change in what video intelligence can deliver, moving beyond detection and into genuine understanding of behaviors and actions in complex real-world environments," Wilson said.

He said the system is designed for scenarios where a still image does not provide enough information for accurate assessment.

"It addresses a challenge that traditional video analytics has struggled to solve efficiently: understanding what is happening when a single still frame is not enough. Things like fighting, climbing, and theft have typically required human eyes to detect them accurately. Now we can help operators gain a clearer picture of what does and doesn't need their urgent attention," Wilson said.

The market for video analytics has drawn increasing interest as organisations seek to improve security operations and use existing infrastructure for other forms of monitoring. Eluviant cited an estimate that the sector could be worth USD $30 billion by the end of the decade.

Earlier work under the IntelexVision brand laid the groundwork for both the latest launch and the rebrand, Eluviant said.

"Everything we have built under the IntelexVision name - our technology, customer relationships, and hard-won understanding of what enterprise deployments actually require - is the foundation this moment stands on," Wilson said.

"This is what that work was always building towards: the capability to deliver video intelligence at scale, securely, in the real world. Our new identity is our statement of intent and we intend to continue leading this movement, having already helped shape it for the better part of a decade," Wilson said.