Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
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Seventh Sense
Best overallNeither Paravision nor Seventh Sense is built for everyday users — both are enterprise-grade biometric tools requiring serious technical know-how. Paravision wins on raw accuracy and passive liveness detection, but Seventh Sense is easier to integrate via API. For a non-technical person, neither is a practical choice; you'd be better off with a consumer app like FaceID or a cloud service like AWS Rekognition.
Paravision
Seventh Sense
Scores at a glance
Choose Paravision if
Choose Seventh Sense if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Paravision | Seventh Sense | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No — neither has a mobile app. Paravision offers mobile SDKs for Android/iOS, but you'd need to build the app yourself. Seventh Sense is API-only, so you'd need a developer to create a mobile interface.
Neither is ideal — both are enterprise tools with hidden pricing. For a small business, consider a service like Onfido or Jumio that offers self-serve pricing and a web dashboard.
No — Paravision's pricing is unpublished and likely six figures annually. Startups should look at AWS Rekognition or Azure Face API, which offer pay-as-you-go pricing.
Paravision supports RTSP streams and video files, making it suitable for live camera feeds. Seventh Sense also handles video, but both require custom integration — no plug-and-play with existing systems.
Neither is easy. Seventh Sense has a slightly simpler API key onboarding, but both require coding. If you can't write Python or C++, neither tool is usable.
Paravision and Seventh Sense are powerful but impractical for everyday users — both require coding, have hidden pricing, and lack mobile apps, so look elsewhere unless you're a developer with an enterprise budget.
Honestly, if you're reading this as an everyday user, skip both tools. Paravision and Seventh Sense are built for engineers at big companies with big budgets. For face recognition on your phone or small project, try a free service like Google's ML Kit or a paid API like AWS Rekognition — they're much easier to get started with.
Detail pages: Paravision · Seventh Sense