Bastille Networks Debuts Bastille Enterprise Cellular Intrusion Detection

Bastille Networks recently launched its new cellular intrusion detection Bastille Enterprise. The solution, which can be used to locate mobile phones using cellular signals and combat radio frequency threats, was previously only available to military and law enforcement agencies.

“It wasn’t until 2020 that Bastille finally received FCC approval for its civilian cellular sensor array,” Bastille CEO Chris Risley said in a press release. “This enables Bastille to offer accurate detection of cellular intrusions to the enterprise for the first time. Corporations can now have the RF security that the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community rely on to protect the nation’s secrets.”

The company said it provides corporations with the ability to detect, locate and mitigate radio-borne threats to their assets, facilities and networks. These threats originate from managed, unmanaged, and rogue wireless IoT and cellular devices.

Bastille uses Software Defined Radios (SDRs) to monitor the radio space in facilities from 60MHz to 6 GHz. Over 70% of networked devices are connected via radio frequency (RF) and cellular network.

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