Hello, I’d like to know more about that Bunny project. My company uses wireless networks to organize work flow and to allow our personnel to work with their own mobile gadgets, such as smartphones or tablets. That’s why it would be really cool to have something, that is able to protect that traffic.
DroneGun DroneGun GPS signal jammer drone has successfully passed the French military DREP test, which measures electromagnetic emission levels on human users. In fact, as Bloomberg points out, it’s not a gun as such, but a drone jammer – the HP 47 Counter UAV Jammer, to be precise. It does not pull the plane out of the sky: instead, it prevents it from being remotely controlled, letting it hover in the air, and stops the images or video sent back to its owner.
It works by wifi jammer signals to drones, making them unresponsive. A thermal imaging camera allows the Auds operator to target the unwanted drone before the signal jamming, via a high power radio signal, is activated.
You should also know, that Wi-Fi is really vulnerable and it would be cool to avoid using it in corporate segment. And Bunny won’t be able to grant a full protection from various hackers, because it simply disguises traffic, making it harder to detect, but that’s not impossible. Keep in mind that this traffic can be also intercepted.
Another problem here lies in the fact that Bunny still won’t work with smartphones or tablets, and we’d like to recommend you avoid using those to connect your corporate network. Smartphones are really vulnreable, and someone may hack it and commence a man in the middle attack on the wired and secure network of your company. In that case, classic powerful Wi-Fi signal blockers would be much better, because they are able to limit the spreading of Wi-Fi signals and make those immune to interception.