
Intercepted Location Data Can Help Intelligence Agencies
Having location capabilities in a mobile network was originally an afterthought. The first Global System for Mobile (GSM) network was launched in Finland in 1991
With 5G deployments ongoing and 6G some years away, 3GPP Release 18 provides an evolutionary step forward with the first 5G Advanced (5.5G) standard, enhancing performance, efficiency, and flexibility.
Controlling borders is vital to every country’s national interest, from managing immigration to preventing drug smuggling, human trafficking, and terrorism - but physical barriers are no longer enough.
In the coming years, AI is expected to dramatically accelerate the evolution of lawful intelligence, giving law enforcement agencies the ability to efficiently draw insight from data at unprecedented scale.
Quantum Computing may enable communications that do not travel across a network in the conventional sense and endanger traditional encryption methods, carrying critical implications for lawful intelligence.
Preventing illicit trafficking is a daunting task for border security agencies. AI-powered Computer Vision and location intelligence enhance security, reduce costs, and close surveillance gaps.
Having location capabilities in a mobile network was originally an afterthought. The first Global System for Mobile (GSM) network was launched in Finland in 1991
THE DATA SILO DILEMMA FOR LAW ENFORCEMENT
How to Ingest, Filter and Query 5G Volumes
Webinar Presented by Kevin McTiernan