Drone Exposure Is Now a Corporate Liability
Corporate facilities increasingly operate inside contested airspace, even when they do not recognize it.
Industrial campuses and energy plants are visible from above. Distribution hubs reveal logistics patterns. R&D centers expose physical layouts and workflow cadence. Drones allow remote observation without physical trespass.
Airspace risk is measurable.
A structured enterprise assessment includes:
• Terrain and line-of-sight modeling to identify natural shielding or exposure
• RF spectrum baselining to distinguish background drone traffic from anomalies
• Radar coverage analysis to account for low-altitude masking
• Legal review of mitigation authority and reporting requirements
Recent airspace disruptions near commercial airports illustrated how quickly unidentified aerial activity can halt operations. The cost is immediate. The reputational impact lingers.
Facilities designed around horizontal intrusion lack vertical safeguards. Badge systems and fences offer no protection against aerial reconnaissance. Monitoring must expand accordingly.
Technical rigor matters. Detection range, false positive rates, environmental interference, and integration with existing security operations centers all influence effectiveness.
ARCYN Defense™ approaches enterprise counter-UAS as a layered integration problem.
Detection sensors feed centralized analytics. Escalation thresholds are predefined. Iron Rain™ operates within this governance structure to provide controlled mitigation when required, rather than reactive or indiscriminate response.
Airspace is now part of enterprise continuity planning. Structured oversight prevents improvisation under stress.