Army-led JIATF-401 issued a guide outlining sensor technologies used to detect drone threats and the privacy protections tied to their use.
JIATF-401’s new guide details radar, RF, and EO/IR counter-drone technologies while enforcing privacy protections.
The U.S. Marine Corps is looking for camouflage cloaks that shield wearers from prying eyes and infrared cameras.
It takes just a moment to add a new app to your phone, but adding a sensor to a military radar display takes years. That’s why air-defense troops must bounce between multiple systems, wasting precious ...
As a growing fleet of drones hover over U.S. skies, the devices are giving rise to security concerns. In some cases, the potential threat is real while others, like a 2024 UFO panic in New Jersey, are ...
Drones can save their own flight and sensor data on a blockchain. This system works without cloud servers and keeps records ...
Currently, that data is primarily used by commentators and athletes looking to share more detailed, behind-the-scenes insights with their fans on social media. In time though, Zobrist told Forbes they ...
What happens when the cheapest aircraft in the sky starts dictating how the most expensive defenses are used? That question now sits at the center of air-defense planning. Small unmanned aircraft no ...
Designers are looking to reduce the cost of drone systems for a wide range of applications but still need to provide accurate positioning data. This however is not as easy is it might appear. There ...
Ukrainian interceptors are successfully countering Russian Geran drones. To counter these, Russia will move to faster ...