The category of “monitoring” โ baby monitors, nanny cams, fall detectors, GPS trackers, classroom cameras, dorm cameras, dog cams โ has exploded in the last decade. Every product in the category sells the same idea: you can be elsewhere and still know what is happening. That is technically true and importantly false. Knowing what is happening is not the same as being able to do anything about it, and supervision was always about the second part more than the first.
The feed is not the watch.
Latency is the gap the marketing ignores
A camera shows you what already happened. By the time a parent in the kitchen sees their toddler climbing the bookshelf on the monitor, walks to the room, and intervenes, 30 to 90 seconds have elapsed. For most situations that is fine. For the situations the monitor was sold to address โ a fall, a choking incident, a stranger entering โ 30 seconds is too long. Live human supervision compresses that latency to zero because the supervising adult is already in the room. Marketing copy compares the monitor to no monitor, which is a flattering comparison. The more honest comparison is to a present adult, and against that the device loses on every metric except the parent’s freedom to be elsewhere, which is the actual product being sold.
Continuous monitoring degrades attention over time
The attention research on continuous monitoring tasks is unambiguous: humans are bad at watching feeds for things that rarely happen. Air traffic controllers, security guards, and ICU nurses are studied repeatedly because the failure mode is consistent. Vigilance decays within minutes. A parent glancing at a monitor app between work emails is not in a supervision posture; they are in a notification posture, scanning for whatever is salient enough to grab them. The actual emergencies the device was bought to prevent are often quiet and slow at first, exactly the kind of thing the human brain filters out when half-attending. Active supervision is a different cognitive mode, and the monitor encourages the wrong one.
False reassurance reshapes behavior in subtle ways
The harder problem is what monitoring does to the supervisor. Caregivers with good monitoring systems consistently report extending the radius of acceptable absence. The parent who would have stayed in the room with the toddler now feels comfortable in the next room because the camera is watching. The eldercare aide who would have checked the bathroom every fifteen minutes relies on the fall detector. Each of these decisions is reasonable in isolation. Cumulatively they reduce the number of moments where supervision is genuinely live. When the monitor fails โ battery dead, Wi-Fi out, sensor false negative โ the radius does not contract automatically. The behavior change persists past the technology that justified it.
Bottom line
Monitoring devices are useful tools for specific tasks: peace of mind during sleep, awareness when you cannot be in two rooms, evidence after an incident. They are not substitutes for being present. Treat them as supplements, not replacements.
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