In federal and government operations, real-time video has become the backbone of situational awareness. From emergency response coordination to intelligence monitoring, video walls and distributed video networks enable agencies to see, analyze, and act on critical information quickly and confidently. The challenge is not only accessing video in real-time, but also ensuring that these operations remain secure, reliable, and mission ready.
At Haivision, we understand the unique challenges government agencies face when it comes to deploying and managing secure video solutions. With decades of experience in mission-critical video technology, we help agencies maintain secure, real-time operations by unifying multiple video sources, enforcing strict access controls, and ensuring continuous uptime. While complying with federal security standards, our solutions allow agencies to operate with confidence, knowing that sensitive information is displayed appropriately without interrupting operational flow.
The Challenge: Maintaining Secure, Real-Time Operations
Government video walls aggregate video from a multitude of sources, including CCTV, drone feeds, field sensors, traffic and infrastructure systems, and legacy platforms.
Riley Shaw, Sales Engineer at Haivision, explains: “The video wall ecosystem is designed to be source-agnostic. It can take inputs from cameras, drones, sensors, or legacy systems and present them in a single common operating picture without storing or forwarding any classified information.”
While this provides unmatched situational awareness, it introduces several operational challenges:
- Multi-enclave operations: Agencies often need to display classified and unclassified video side by side. Haivision supports multi-enclave video aggregation without creating a data path between networks, ensuring that classified information remains secure.
- Access management: Sensitive video must only reach authorized personnel at the right time across departments and agencies.
- Cybersecurity threats: Real-time networks are frequent targets for malicious actors attempting to disrupt operations.
- Complex integrations: Agencies must consolidate feeds from diverse platforms, including legacy systems, without interrupting operations.
- Operational reliability: Video solutions must remain live and accurate during emergencies, infrastructure failures, or cyber incidents.
How Haivision Supports Security in Real-Time Operations
Haivision’s approach ensures operational security at every level:
- Volatile memory video processing: Video processors function like high-security monitors and do not store, retain, or record any information. Every video source is transmitted and displayed without creating a back channel or storage path, ensuring that classified material cannot be compromised.
- Network segmentation and partner integration: For high-security environments, Haivision works with specialized federal integrators to manage input-side security, isolation, and enclave segregation. Our solutions can integrate with National Information Assurance Partnership (NIAP)-approved technology when necessary.
- Multi-layer isolation: Fiber extenders can be configured as one-way channels to maintain separation between classified and unclassified feeds. Additional layers, such as secure isolators and enclave-specific devices, can be implemented based on operational requirements.
- Compliance with federal standards: Haivision solutions are designed to meet National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA) standards. Agencies can remain audit-ready while maintaining full operational security.
- Redundancy and continuity: Multi-site and backup configurations ensure that operations remain live even during hardware failures or network outages.
Best Practices for Securing Government Video Operations
Government agencies rely on mission-critical video walls to maintain situational awareness, streamline decision-making, and coordinate operations across departments. Haivision’s video wall solutions provide a secure, scalable, and flexible platform that centralizes live video, system data, and intelligence feeds in a single operational view. Operators can visualize multiple sources simultaneously, adapt layouts to evolving situations, and respond quickly to incidents with confidence.
Securing a mission-critical video wall involves both technology and process. Agencies can achieve this by implementing:
- Encrypted video transport: Protect every feed in transit to prevent interception or tampering.
- Role-based access control (RBAC): Ensure only authorized personnel can view or manage video content, enabling secure cross-agency collaboration.
- Centralized monitoring and management: Oversee all video feeds from a single platform, maintain compliance, and respond immediately to operational issues.
- Redundant infrastructure:Maintain live video even during power outages or equipment failures.
- Partnered integration for complex environments: Work with AV integrators or federal specialists to manage highly classified or multi-enclave setups.
Riley also explains that “Our solutions are adaptable to different levels of classification and enclave complexity. We can work with our partners and customers to design a system that meets their security, space, and operational needs.”
How Haivision Video Solutions Work Together to Enable Secure, Real-Time Operations
Haivision provides an integrated ecosystem of video solutions that work together to deliver secure, real-time operations across federal and government agencies. A typical workflow includes:
- Video Sources: Video inputs come from multiple sources, including closed-circuit television cameras, drones, sensors, and legacy platforms. Each source can reside in a different security enclave depending on classification.
- Input Handling: High-security environments use specialized encoders and partner-integrated isolation solutions to ensure classified and unclassified feeds remain segregated. Fiber extenders and National Information Assurance Partnership (NIAP)-approved AV interfaces may be used to maintain one-way data flow.
- Video Aggregation: Haivision Command 360 video wall processors aggregate all feeds into a unified common operating picture. The processor operates as a volatile display, meaning no video is stored or recorded, and classified data cannot cross into other networks.
- Distribution to Operators: Operators in central or distributed operations centers can view real-time video on video walls or individual workstations. Role-based access control (RBAC) ensures each user sees only the content they are authorized to access.
- Multi-Enclave Coordination: Haivision Media Platform (HMP) distributes content securely within a single enclave. Makito video encoders and decoders can transport video to other sites or agencies, maintaining separation between different security domains while supporting multi-agency collaboration.
- Redundancy and Continuity: Backup processors, duplicators, and redundant network paths ensure continuous uptime. Even if one component fails, operators continue to have access to live video feeds without interruption.
- Centralized Monitoring and Management: A unified platform allows IT teams to monitor all feeds, enforce security policies, maintain compliance with standards such as National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA), and respond immediately to operational issues.
Essential Solutions for Essential Operations
Secure, real-time video solutions are essential for federal agencies managing complex operations. Haivision empowers agencies to maintain operational continuity, protect sensitive content, and collaborate securely while meeting strict federal standards. By combining advanced technology with deep expertise, Haivision ensures that government video solutions remain not only powerful but secure, supporting mission-critical operations when they are needed most.
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