/* Auto-generated from uploads/collab profile.csv */
window.COLLABS = [
 {
  "slug": "patrol-6",
  "title": "Patrol 6",
  "sub": "An AI body camera platform purpose-built for private security teams, combining patrol proof, incident capture, supervisor visibility, and faster reporting in one operational workflow.",
  "image": "https://framerusercontent.com/images/8vxHKxSJoOZxXXBg07hls1Tco.jpeg",
  "content": "<p dir=\"auto\">Private security teams are asked to do more than record what happened. They need to prove patrols were completed, capture incidents clearly, give supervisors fast context, and produce reports that hold up under review. Patrol 6 is built around that reality as an AI body camera platform designed specifically for private security operations rather than adapted from police-first workflows.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Built for Private Security</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Patrol 6 describes its platform as more than a standard body camera. It combines body-worn hardware with AI guidance, reporting, evidence handling, and command-center workflows so teams can use footage inside day-to-day security operations instead of treating video as something reviewed only after the shift ends.</p><p dir=\"auto\">The company says its AI can guide guards during patrols, understand surroundings, and help generate complete reports automatically at shift end. It also emphasizes that the platform is purpose-built for the private security industry, with client-facing accountability and supervisor visibility as part of the product’s core value.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Patrol Proof and Incident Capture</h3><p dir=\"auto\">One of Patrol 6’s clearest use cases is patrol proof. The platform uses body-worn capture, location context, and time-based evidence to help teams show that patrols and checkpoints happened when they were supposed to. That makes the system relevant not only for officers in the field, but also for supervisors and clients who need clearer operational records.</p><p dir=\"auto\">Patrol 6 also focuses heavily on incident capture and reporting. According to the company, the goal is to move from the moment of capture into usable reports faster, reducing the amount of time guards and supervisors spend reconstructing events after a shift.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Supervisor Visibility</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Patrol 6 positions supervisor visibility as a core part of the platform. Its cloud system is described as an operating system for private security, with live feeds, team management, incident alerts, analytics, and centralized monitoring for active cameras.</p><p dir=\"auto\">That matters because many security operations are not limited by whether video exists, but by how quickly someone can understand what happened and decide what to do next. Patrol 6 says its platform gives command-center teams and field leadership faster context when a post escalates or an incident needs review.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Reporting and Operational Workflow</h3><p dir=\"auto\">A traditional body camera may capture footage for later review, but Patrol 6 frames its value around workflow acceleration. The company says it transforms verified audio and video into detailed patrol and incident reports, aiming to reduce manual reporting while improving objectivity and completeness.</p><p dir=\"auto\">In practice, that positions Patrol 6 less as a standalone recording device and more as an operational layer for patrol teams. The platform is built to support evidence defensibility, accountability, and reporting speed in environments where security vendors need to document activity clearly for internal teams and external clients.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Why the Collaboration Matters</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Patrol 6 represents a shift in how private security technology is being designed. Instead of retrofitting general-purpose tools, the company is building specifically for guard patrols, supervisor response, incident documentation, and client accountability. That makes the collaboration relevant for a broader security ecosystem focused on visibility, trust, and operational performance.</p><p dir=\"auto\">Its positioning is straightforward: better evidence, faster reporting, and stronger oversight for private security teams working in real environments. For a collaboration profile, that makes Patrol 6 less about hardware alone and more about improving how patrol operations are recorded, reviewed, and managed.</p><blockquote><p dir=\"auto\">A standard body camera may record what happened. Patrol 6 is built to help security teams use that capture inside the patrol, reporting, and client-accountability workflows that drive renewals and risk.</p></blockquote>"
 },
 {
  "slug": "asylon-robotics",
  "title": "Asylon Robotics",
  "sub": "A robotic perimeter security company combining aerial drones, ground robots, AI, and 24/7 human oversight to help protect facilities, infrastructure, and large-scale operations.",
  "image": "https://framerusercontent.com/images/azoyeqfDVfsxPj9fM7xsyvh1jSQ.jpeg",
  "content": "<p dir=\"auto\">Modern perimeter security is no longer limited to fixed cameras and manual patrols. Asylon Robotics is building a more automated model by combining drones, ground robotics, software, and human-in-the-loop monitoring into one managed security platform.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Built for Modern Perimeters</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Asylon describes itself as a full-service American robotic perimeter security company. Its platform brings together aerial drones, ground robots, and AI to automate patrol operations while keeping trained people involved in monitoring, verification, and escalation.</p><p dir=\"auto\">Rather than offering robotics as standalone hardware, Asylon packages the system as a managed service. That includes hardware, software, and 24/7 support through its Robotic Security Operations Center, helping organizations deploy robotic security without carrying the full operational burden internally.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Air and Ground Security</h3><p dir=\"auto\">A core part of Asylon’s offering is the combination of aerial and ground systems. The company highlights its Guardian drone platform for aerial monitoring and its DroneDog robotic platform for ground patrol, creating layered visibility across large or complex environments.</p><p dir=\"auto\">This approach matters because many facilities struggle with blind spots, wide perimeters, and delayed alarm verification. By combining ground patrol robotics with aerial overwatch, Asylon is designed to improve coverage and provide faster visibility when something needs to be checked or escalated.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Human Oversight Still Matters</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Even with automation at the center of the platform, Asylon repeatedly emphasizes human oversight. The company’s model is built around AI plus robotics plus trained operators, with RSOC teams monitoring missions, verifying alerts, and escalating incidents based on site procedures.</p><p dir=\"auto\">That human-in-the-loop structure is one of the most important parts of the platform. It positions robotics not as a replacement for security teams, but as a force multiplier that helps extend visibility, reduce repetitive patrol demands, and support faster decision-making.</p><h3 dir=\"auto\">Why the Collaboration Matters</h3><p dir=\"auto\">Asylon represents a different direction for physical security: one where robotics, software, and human expertise work together to strengthen perimeter protection. For a collaboration ecosystem focused on modern security capability, that makes Asylon a strong fit where automated monitoring, wider coverage, and operational responsiveness matter most.</p><p dir=\"auto\">Its value is not only in the technology itself, but in how that technology is delivered — as a coordinated, managed system for real environments such as logistics sites, critical infrastructure, and enterprise facilities.</p><blockquote><p dir=\"auto\">Asylon brings together drones, ground robots, AI, and human oversight to create a more proactive model of perimeter security.</p></blockquote>"
 }
];
