The Ranch couldn't be without surveillance, so drones were arranged to patrol and film. Su Chenzhou was afraid that drones might miss blind spots, so he designed little hamster monitors.
These nifty gadgets sat at the edges of each racetrack at the Ranch, shooting dynamic videos from the bottom up, with very high clarity.
Surveillance needed to be registered, and the machines had to come from an official channel. That channel was Su Chenzhou's Tech Company, ensuring all monitors were up to standard.
At the same time, the guests at the Ranch were all aware of the surveillance.
But what they knew was just about the drones; the little hamsters hardly ever showed themselves, and there was no need for them to.
The photographs taken by the drones were from above, and sometimes guests would ask to have some pictures developed to show off to friends, but they would never ask for pictures taken from below—those weren't flattering.