Use cases · 4 venue types 50+ signals each

Same 50+ signals. Different threat model per venue.

The signals don't change. What changes is which ones earn space on the brief and how they get weighted. A festival sweats heat advisories the way a political rally sweats counter-demo callouts. Same fusion engine, scored for what actually matters at your event.

Event security is venue-shaped.

The 50+ signals SignalGuard pulls don't change between a Madison Square Garden game, a four-day camping festival in the desert, a stadium NFL Sunday, and a political rally on a county fairgrounds. What changes is which signals dominate the brief and how their severity gets weighted against the threat model of that specific event. A concert at a hard-walled arena worries about chatter, ticket-resale fraud, and load-out traffic. A multi-day festival worries about heat advisories, lightning windows, on-site medical baselines, and the cumulative crowd-density math that nobody outside festival ops thinks about. A stadium worries about airspace TFRs, gameday traffic dispersal, and scanner chatter that precedes the kickoff. A political rally worries about counter-demo callouts, federal NTAS context, and airspace activity that becomes unusually relevant when a protectee is on-site.

Same fusion engine, four different scoring profiles. Weather severity rolls up harder for an outdoor festival than for a roofed arena. Chatter signals weight differently when the event is a political appearance versus a residency concert. Crowd potential — the rollup of Ticketmaster + Places + nearby-event data — fires at different thresholds depending on whether the venue's catchment is a stadium with 70K seats or a 2,000-cap club. The brief looks the same. The math behind it doesn't.

The four pages below are the closest matches we ship copy for. Pick the one closest to what you're running. If you're running something hybrid — say a music festival on a fairgrounds that's also hosting a rally that weekend — pick the venue whose risk profile feels most like yours, then read the others for the signals you wouldn't have thought to look for. Every page links back to the same scan flow; the weighting just changes with the venue you select on /scan.