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Blockchain startup Wright Technologies wins trip to France to promote tamper-proof drone tracking system

Adelaide-based Wright Technologies, a startup using blockchain to securely track and identify drones, is off to France to promote its technology.
blockchain drones
The Wright Technologies team.

Byย Andrew Spence

A South Australian startup that is using blockchain to securely track and identify drones will head to France next week to meet with major defence and aerospace companies.

Adelaide-based Wright Technologies aims to conduct field trials of its drone identification and tracking system before the end of the year and has already been in talks with a defence company in Australia.

Last year the fledgling company won the International Grand Prize at the ActInSpace innovation contest, which is initiated by the French Space Agency (CNES) with support from the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Business Incubation Centres network. Awarded at the Toulouse Space Show 2018, the prize included a zero-gravity flight in the A310 ZERO-G.

Members of the Wright team will travel back to France next week to network in Toulouseโ€™s Aerospace Valley and take the zero-gravity flight in Bordeaux.

โ€œWeโ€™ve got some meetings scheduled with some big defence companies and weโ€™re hoping to establish some networks in that Aerospace Valley in Toulouse so hopefully something comes out of it to help get the ball rolling,โ€ Wright Technologies chief executive officer and co-founder Kosta Canatselis said.

โ€œWeโ€™re working on being able to understand what device is where with absolute certainty with something called proof-of-location,โ€ he said.

โ€œIn the context of air safety and security, airspaces at the moment are very closed off and restricted because of the danger of having drones there and not being able to understand where they are.โ€

Wright Technologies is based at the University of South Australiaโ€™s Innovation and Collaboration Centre.

The startup is also a finalist in next monthโ€™s $100,000 Blockchain Innovation Challenge, which will be held as part of the ADC Global Blockchain Summit in its home state of South Australia from March 18-20.

Canatselis said GPS on its own was not secure and could be โ€œspoofedโ€.

He said his tamper-proof blockchain technology would be particularly valuable in applications dealing with the freight of high-value goods.

โ€œWith autonomy, as soon as you can start increasing the level of trust between different stakeholders you can start letting go of human interaction,โ€ Canatselis said.

โ€œBasically how blockchain works is there is an immutable ledger (a record that cannot be changed) where all the actions are recorded and you can start seeing things like a drone delivering something to a house, proving it has been to the house and then releasing payment and things like that.

โ€œProof-of-location is a problem that existsย โ€”ย there are a few other companies trying to do it as wellย โ€” but our big differentiator is that we are able to operate on resource-constrained devices such as drones and small devices that other competitors out there arenโ€™t able to do.โ€

This article was first published on The Lead. Read the original article.

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