Tag: Project Hafnia

  • Milestone and Nvidia power Genoa’s smart city revamp with AI that speaks the traffic’s language

    Milestone and Nvidia power Genoa’s smart city revamp with AI that speaks the traffic’s language

    MUMBAI: Europe’s streets are getting smarter—and not just with electric cars and bike lanes. In a move that promises to give urban infrastructure a digital edge, Milestone Systems has teamed up with Nvidia and European cloud provider Nebius to launch Project Hafnia in Genoa, Italy. The initiative aims to fine-tune AI tools that manage traffic, improve public safety and ultimately make cities think on their feet—or wheels.

    After kicking off in the United States, Project Hafnia has now officially arrived in Europe, bringing with it a data-rich platform that trains visual language models (VLMs) using real and synthetic video inputs. These models can map visual footage to text-based insights, allowing AI systems to not only recognise but also describe what they see. From traffic snarls to security alerts, this machine vision could soon become a city planner’s best friend.

    “I’m proud that with Project Hafnia we are introducing the world’s first platform to meet the EU’s regulatory standards, powered by Nvidia technology. With Nebius as our European cloud provider, we can now enable compliant, high-quality video data for training vision AI models — fully anchored in Europe. This marks an important step forward in supporting the EU’s commitment to transparency, fairness, and regulatory oversight in AI and technology — the foundation for responsible AI innovation”, said Milestone CEO Thomas Jensen.

    Project Hafnia has become one of the first real-world use cases of the Nvidia Omniverse Blueprint for Smart City AI. Milestone is also expanding its data platform with Nvidia Cosmos to blend real-world footage with synthetic video for better training outcomes. All of it is built to comply with Europe’s gold-standard frameworks like GDPR and the AI Act.

    The initiative’s debut product is a European-trained VLM, developed using responsibly sourced transportation data from Genoa. This model supports video search and summarisation using Nvidia’s AI stack and GPU-optimised infrastructure. It’s all part of Milestone’s goal to fuse regulatory integrity with technical prowess.

    “AI is achieving extraordinary results, unthinkable until recently, and the research in the area is in constant development. We enthusiastically joined forces with Project Hafnia to allow developers to access fundamental video data for training new Vision AI models. This data-driven approach is a key principle in the Three-Year Plan for Information Technology, aiming to promote digital transformation in Italy and particularly within the Italian Public Administration”, said City of Genoa information systems officer Andrea Sinisi.

    To ensure that the data stays within EU borders, Milestone has roped in Nebius to handle cloud infrastructure. As an EU-based provider, Nebius delivers the GPU muscle required to run large-scale training while maintaining complete compliance with European sovereignty requirements.

    “Project Hafnia is exactly the kind of real-world, AI-at-scale challenge Nebius was built for”, said Nebius CBO Roman Chernin. “Supporting AI development today requires infrastructure engineered for high-throughput, high-resilience workloads, with precise control over where data lives and how it’s handled. From our EU-based data centres to our deep integration with Nvidia’s AI stack, we’ve built a platform that meets the highest standards for performance, privacy and transparency”.

    While Genoa serves as the testing ground, Milestone’s framework is built to scale across cities and sectors. The VLMs and datasets will be licensed to local governments through controlled access, ensuring ethical, transparent AI adoption that stays rooted in legal and cultural reality.

    From streetlights to silicon, Europe’s cities may soon run not just on power—but on vision.

  • Danish firm Milestone launches video data platform for coders to train AI models

    Danish firm Milestone launches video data platform for coders to train AI models

    MUMBAI: In a world where AI developers are positively gagging for decent video data, Danish surveillance heavyweight Milestone Systems is stepping into the breach. The Copenhagen-based firm unveiled Project Hafnia today, a new platform that promises to democratise AI model training by serving up high-quality, legally kosher video data to hungry developers.

    Milestone’s new offering leverages Nvidia’s tech stack to create what it hopes will be a knockout service for both data generators keen to monetise their footage and developers desperate for properly annotated video data that won’t land them in regulatory hot water.

    “Artificial intelligence is our generation’s biggest game-changer,” says Milestone Systems  chief executive Thomas Jensen. “The Project Hafnia platform will collect and curate data with the aspiration to be the world’s smartest, fastest and responsible platform for video data and training of AI models.”

    The firm is rolling out two distinct services:

    * A cutting-edge “training as a service” offering where coders can access quality data to train their AI models
    * A visual language model (VLM) service for smart city transport applications, which the company boldly claims will be “industry leading”

    Milestone reckons its platform, powered by Nvidia’s Cosmos Curator data curation tools, will speed up AI and analytics development by up to 30 times compared with current standards—a claim that will raise eyebrows in the notoriously cautious tech community.

    The first cab off the rank is a transport-focused VLM designed to tackle everything from general traffic assessments to incident reporting and alert validation.

    “The next phase in development and adoption of visually perceptive agentic AI services will be unlocked by recipes like Nvidia VSS blueprint combined with widely available and accessible fine-tuned VLM models,” says NVIDIA vice president and general manager of embedded and edge computing Deepu Talla.

    Project Hafnia launches initially as a pilot, with keen developers able to join a waitlist at hafnia.milestonesys.com/joinwaitlist. The platform will cut its teeth on traffic video data before expanding to other domains once fully operational.

    Founded in 1998 and headquartered in Copenhagen, Milestone employs more than 1,500 people worldwide and has been an independent company in the Canon Group since 2014.