A daycare, school, or coaching center runs Nurby on its own cameras. Each parent follows one child, and nobody else. A push lands when a child arrives, and pickup is checked against an approved list. Every other face in the room stays blurred.
Drop-off is a leap of faith. Pickup is a trust exercise. And a camera wall that shows every child to every viewer trades one family's comfort for another family's privacy.
A parent drops off and then wonders all day. Did my child actually make it inside, or are they still standing at the gate?
Custody changes, new grandparents, a babysitter you met once. Front-desk staff cannot remember every face that should and should not collect a child.
A normal camera wall shows every child to every viewer. That is a privacy problem for every other family in the room.
Guardian gives each family a calm panel that answers the questions a parent actually has. Did they arrive. Are they okay. Who did they leave with. Nothing more, and nobody else.
The same privacy model runs under every Guardian view. It is not a feature you switch on. It is how the system is built.
Guardian forks no detection or identity logic. It is a thin permission and view layer on the same Nurby engine that recognizes faces and reads plates. Every engine improvement is inherited automatically.
A daycare, school, or coaching center points Nurby at its own cameras. Children are recognized on-device. Nothing leaves the building.
The center links a parent to a single child, sets the approved-pickup list, an expiry, and an instant revoke. Parents never grant themselves access.
They get safe-arrival and verified-pickup pushes, a calm presence check, and a real day timeline. Everyone else stays blurred.
Guardian ships inside the open-source Nurby codebase. No paywall, no billing. Self-host the whole thing on hardware you control, in your own building.