Modern criminals exploit weaknesses that older hardware cannot resist. Legacy cameras often max out at 480 or 720p, turning faces and license plates into blurry pixels that cannot stand up in court or satisfy insurers. Even if you do capture the event, no one can confirm who did it, so the footage is practically useless.
And it gets worse over time:
- Degrading sensors lose color accuracy and develop “stuck” pixels, so identifying clothing colors or vehicle paint becomes guesswork.
- Dropped frames and video glitches plague aging recorders and outdated cabling. When the network hiccups or the hard-drive buffer can’t keep up, you get frozen screens and skipped footage—sometimes at the very moment you need evidence.
- Unpatched firmware leaves cameras wide open for cyber hackers who can disable streams or hijack video feeds in minutes.
Hard drives inside old recorders run twenty-four hours a day; once they fail, they take weeks of evidence with them. If any of these fail points collide during a break-in, you have no reliable record, no way to identify suspects, and no leverage with your insurance carrier. A fresh commercial surveillance system with 4K imaging, encrypted data, and self-diagnosing hardware closes those gaps before criminals find them.