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WITNESS · Physical security sensing

Boutique hotels.

Bag to lift to landing. Without identifying anyone.

The boutique-hotel cohort — Soho House, the Pig group, the Hoxton chain, the independent Edinburgh and Bath operators — all share a brand promise of discretion. ReID via embeddings honours that promise by construction: we don't identify anyone, we just notice that the bag entering the lift on camera B is the same bag that arrived in the lobby on camera A.

What the night manager tells us first.

  • 01

    Lost-bag investigations take a shift

    Guest in 412 reports a bag stolen from the lobby coat check at 14:00. Today: night manager scrubs through six cameras, three angles, the loading bay and the basement service lift. With ReID, the same investigation is one query and a thumbnail strip.

  • 02

    Guest privacy is the brand

    Boutique hotels live and die by the discretion guarantee. The Soho House cohort, the Pig group, the Hoxton chain. Facial recognition is brand-killing; embedding-only ReID is the only posture that lets you put 'we never identify you' in the front-of-house script.

  • 03

    Night porter is two people, not five

    Under-200-key hotels typically run a two-person night shift across reception and concierge. They cover three floors and six cameras. The bandwidth to watch screens does not exist; the bandwidth to investigate after the fact barely does.

The discretion guarantee. In writing.

The guest-privacy story is the front-of-house pitch, not a footnote in the DPIA. Embedding-only ReID lets the night-manager script remain "we never identify you" because the system, on its own, can't. There is no name. There is no face image. There is a 14-day-lived vector and a cosine-similarity score.

For groups operating across jurisdictions (Hoxton, Soho House, the Pig group with Cornish + Cotswolds sites), the UK-only residency story holds for the UK estate. Sister sites in EU/US run on different stacks — we'd rather be honest about that than over-promise.