Commercial Times feature: WorldTrend Security President Gao Yong-Hua sits down with the paper to explain how WorldTrend's in-house-developed system + AI video + ISO 27001:2013 certification have made it the go-to partner for mid-to-large enterprise security transformation — when a corporate customer demands that the security vendor pass an information-security audit, all three of these have to be in place.
WorldTrend's read: the key points
Why is an in-house-developed system a hard requirement for enterprise buyers?
Most system-security vendors run on an imported or OEM closed-source control panel. For a small storefront that's fine, but for a mid-to-large enterprise the cracks show fast: when the enterprise IT team asks for an infosec audit, penetration test, or a committed patch schedule, closed-source panels' supply chains almost never comply. What WorldTrend highlights in the article as the "in-house-developed system" advantage is, in essence, giving the customer's infosec team a real counterpart to talk to — with a patch schedule and source-code-level assurance.
AI video: turning "alarms" into "trustworthy events"
The biggest pain point of legacy video security is a high false-alarm rate — wind-blown branches, cats and dogs, changing light all trigger it. WorldTrend stacks AI behavior recognition on top of the video layer to cut false alarms, so that every alarm pushed to the central monitoring station carries real action value. For enterprise customers, that means overnight watch officers don't get trained into apathy by "boy who cried wolf" alerts, and the real intrusions and anomalies don't get drowned out.
ISO 27001:2013: turning trust into evidence
Enterprise security leaders often overlook "how good is the security company's own infosec?" — but that's actually one of the most critical questions. If the security company's monitoring center gets breached and customer data leaks, the fallout is far worse than a single theft. WorldTrend's ISO 27001:2013 Information Security Management System certification turns "trust me" into "here's my third-party audit record".
- Data governance: access permissions and retention periods for customer video feeds, sensor logs, and alarm events are all managed inside the ISO 27001 framework.
- Incident response: documented SOPs, regular drills, audit-traceable evidence.
- Supply-chain management: security update timelines for both in-house-developed panels and existing third-party equipment are tracked.
What this means for the reader
For enterprise security leaders, IT heads, and CISOs, the article delivers a simple but practical screener: when comparing system-security vendors, ask at least three questions — is the control panel developed in-house? Does the AI actually reduce false alarms? Is the infosec management third-party-certified? A vendor that answers "yes" to all three is one that can talk shop as an equal with your enterprise IT team — and that same vendor will give you fewer objections to overcome at procurement, audit, and contract-renewal time.