Even with a government shutdown, Cubic DTECH leadership, James Dick (U.S. Army Rep for U.S. & Canada), and I will be in Washington, DC next week at AUSA. We’re inviting senior leaders and partners to a direct conversation on how DTECH Fusion Trust, powered by HyperSphere, changes the game.
The Problem Today
Re-keying delays kill tempo. A single COMSEC incident can halt operations for 12–48 hours, grounding sorties and cutting off ISR feeds.
Coalition sharing is slow and fragile. Manual key ceremonies delay multinational operations when speed matters most.
Data theft is permanent. Once adversaries capture encrypted archives, they’re banking on quantum computing to unlock them later (Harvest-Now, Decrypt-Later).
Operator burden is unsustainable. Missions depend on scarce crypto custodians and outdated manual key processes.
What Fusion Trust Delivers
No keys to steal, rotate, or recover. Ephemeral, in-memory protection eliminates the COMSEC Achilles’ heel.
Mission continuity. Even in denied, disrupted, intermittent, and limited (DDIL) environments, secured objects keep flowing. No re-key pauses, no mission downtime.
Coalition-ready interoperability. Data secured at creation looks like an ordinary S3 file—partners pull it with existing tools, without crypto friction.
Operational simplicity. “ClickOps” workflow cuts training from 40–80 hours to minutes for operators, 1–2 hours for C2 staff.
Future-proof assurance. Quantum-immune obfuscation plus AES-256-GCM inside FIPS modules, with a NIST National Checklist listing (ID 1232).
The Outcome for Leaders
Commanders:
No more blind spots or lost tempo—ISR, targeting, and mission files stay trustworthy.
Operators:
Mission focus without COMSEC headaches.
Allies:
Seamless data sharing across NATO, FVEY, and AUKUS—trusted at first use.
Program offices:
Compliance and Zero Trust mandates met in a field-ready capability.
Book a session at AUSA with Cubic leadership, James Dick, and myself. See firsthand why Fusion Trust is not just a cybersecurity upgrade—it’s an operational enabler.
Shutdown or not, the mission continues. And so do we.