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DroneShield rolls out ADS-B, enterprise command, and smarter AI

DroneShield’s systems are getting sharper, faster, and far more connected, just as governments and infrastructure operators are scrambling to manage increasingly crowded skies. The counter-drone company has rolled out ADS-B integration for smarter aircraft tracking, launched a new DroneSentry-C2 Enterprise (C2E) platform for nationwide command-and-control, and unveiled its most ambitious AI-powered software update yet.

ADS-B integration: Seeing the full airspace picture

Let’s start with the new ADS-B integration because this is a big deal.

ADS-B (Automatic Dependent Surveillance–Broadcast) is the same system used by air traffic controllers worldwide to track crewed aircraft. DroneShield has now baked that data into its DroneSentry-C2 platform, giving operators the ability to tell the difference between regular aircraft and suspicious drones with ease.

The result? Fewer false alarms and far more confidence in what’s actually flying overhead.

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“Integrating ADS-B data reflects our vision for a future of comprehensive airspace awareness,” saysAngus Bean, DroneShield’s chief product officer. “By including both crewed and uncrewed aviation data, we’re giving our customers the tools they need to make faster and safer decisions.”

This upgrade isn’t just for the military; it’ll help public safety agencies, emergency responders, and critical infrastructure operators too. Whether it’s monitoring a wildfire response, protecting an energy facility, or securing a major event, operators now get a live, unified picture of everything that’s airborne.

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DroneSentry-C2 Enterprise (C2E): Commanding the skies at scale

The second announcement is even more ambitious: DroneSentry-C2 Enterprise, or C2E, a new software platform that links multiple DroneSentry sites into one operational network.

Think of it as a “mission control” for national-level counter-drone defense. C2E connects multiple installations —military bases, airports, energy grids, even data centers — into a single map. From there, authorized users can:

  • Manage drone alerts from across the country.
  • Check system health in real time.
  • Watch live camera feeds for on-the-spot verification.
  • Instantly shift from enterprise-level oversight to local site control.

It’s the kind of seamless integration governments have been asking for, especially as drone threats pop up across multiple critical sites simultaneously.

DroneShield says the first flagship deployment of C2E is already lined up for an Eastern NATO flank region in early 2026, covering a growing cluster of its counter-drone systems.

“C2E addresses the realities of modern airspace security,” Bean explains. “Governments and infrastructure operators must manage counter-drone operations across many distributed sites. C2E is designed specifically for those complex, national-scale environments.”

On the tech side, the new platform includes SAPIENT protocol compatibility, allowing DroneShield’s systems to talk seamlessly with NATO and allied defense networks. It also supports MIL-STD-2525 icons and MGRS grid references, giving defense users a familiar, military-grade interface.

C2E also comes with DroneShield’s ThreatAI software, which intelligently prioritizes drone activity so operators know which alerts matter most.

CEO Oleg Vornik calls C2E “the final piece” of DroneShield’s three-tier software strategy — combining embedded-level tracking, site-level sensor fusion, and now enterprise-level command. “Together, these layers give our customers maximum value,” he says, “and move us closer to our goal of generating 30–40% of revenue from SaaS in the coming years.”

Landmark 4Q25 software release: Smarter AI, faster response

The third announcement is DroneShield’s biggest software update ever, pushing its AI and disruption tech to the next level.

At the heart of it is a new Emitter-Based Disruption Engine, powered by RFAI-ATK technology. This system is “protocol-aware,” meaning it can recognize the type of signal a drone is using and tailor its jamming response to neutralize it more efficiently, without unnecessary radio interference. It’s smarter, cleaner, and a whole lot faster.

The company also expanded its RFAI-2 detection and tracking database — the largest in DroneShield’s history. This AI-trained library of radio frequencies now includes thousands of additional drone signal profiles, helping operators detect and classify even the newest drone models on the market.

And to make sure the system keeps up, the DroneSentry-X Mk2 hardware now packs double the processing power, meaning real-time tracking even in drone-dense environments. Plus, a new feature lets the system keep limited detection running during active jamming — an essential backup for when things get chaotic.

As part of the update, DroneShield has rolled out SAPIENT protocol support across all its sensors, including RfPatrol Mk2, ensuring interoperability across NATO and allied systems. The company even refreshed the RFDM operator interface, making it faster to access actionable intelligence in the field.

“This release reflects DroneShield’s ongoing growth as the world’s most trusted end-to-end counter-drone provider,” says Vornik. “Our vision is to see tens of thousands of devices deployed globally, all receiving regular software updates that make them smarter over time.”

Bean added that it all comes down to data: “Five years ago, we realized counter-UAS is a data problem. That’s why we built what we believe is the world’s largest proprietary drone signal database. It’s what powers our RFAI, RFAI-ATK, and SFAI systems today.”

If there’s a theme to DroneShield’s triple rollout this month, it’s scale and intelligence. The company isn’t just making better drone sensors; it’s building a connected defense network that fuses AI, interoperability, and situational awareness across every level of operation.

From local responders protecting an event to NATO-scale defense networks, DroneShield’s new ecosystem aims to give operators the same thing: clarity, control, and speed.

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Avatar for Ishveena Singh Ishveena Singh

Ishveena Singh is a versatile journalist and writer with a passion for drones and location technologies. She has been named as one of the 50 Rising Stars of the geospatial industry for the year 2021 by Geospatial World magazine.