OPSWAT Sends Device Toward Space

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Attached to a weather balloon, the MetaDefender Kiosk Mini reached an altitude of 104,883 feet (31,968 meters), where it was exposed to high radiation, freezing temperatures (as low as -45.6°F, or -43.1°C), and near-vacuum pressures (9.5 hPa). After nearly 230 minutes, the balloon burst, but even in freefall, the kiosk kept sanitizing and operating until it landed in a river.

“Space systems should be treated as critical infrastructure, and the cyber infrastructure that supports them should be treated as mission-critical infrastructure,” said Benny Czarny, Founder and CEO, OPSWAT. “Cybersecurity in space cannot be built around the idea that someone on Earth will always be available to fix the problem. It must be local, deterministic, segmented, and prevention-first.”

The near-space mission test shows that the MetaDefender Kiosk Mini can secure space-based infrastructure while withstanding: 

  • Frequent movements
  • Drastic changes in temperature, from -45°F to ambient
  • Humidity and water exposure
  • High UV radiation
  • Near-vacuum pressure
  • Offline operation without cloud dependency

“More than the altitude, technology, and cool video, the idea was that cybersecurity has to work in environments where humans cannot easily reach, repair, or reset,” said Czarny. “In space, there is no simple onsite support, quick replacement, or easy second chance. The system must have full trust before it leaves the ground.” 

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