In defense circles, cyber resilience has become a battlefield metric as drones shift from hobbyist devices to mission-critical assets. The industry is racing to secure every link from flight control to data links, and Mobilicom is stepping onto the national stage to unveil a major cybersecurity platform for drones and robotics at AUSA 2025.
Recent Trends
- Growing demand for secure drone ecosystems in defense
- End-to-end cybersecurity platforms gain adoption in military and civil markets
- Procurement emphasis on field-proven, interoperable drone tech
Drone cybersecurity platform debut at AUSA 2025
Washington, D.C. will host the Association of the United States Army’s Annual Meeting & Exposition from October 13–15, 2025, a focal point for defense technology buyers. Mobilicom has planned live demonstrations and a booth presence to engage U.S. Army procurement specialists and global partners during the three-day event.
The event is widely regarded as the premier land-power exposition in North America, attracting more than 44,000 attendees, 750+ exhibitors, and participants from dozens of countries, according to The Manila Times.
According to The Manila Times, Mobilicom will showcase its end-to-end drone security stack including the OS3 Platform Software, ICE Cybersecurity Software, MCU Mesh Networking, SkyHopper Datalinks, and Mobile Ground Control Stations at Booth #8315, in partnership with NOBLE, a provider of defense procurement and logistics solutions. The AUSA Annual Meeting & Exposition is described as the premier land power event in North America with over 44,000 attendees, 750+ exhibits, and representation from 92 countries.
What the platform includes
- OS3 Platform Software
- ICE Cybersecurity Software
- MCU Mesh Networking
- SkyHopper Datalinks
- Mobile Ground Control Stations
Why this matters for defense and industry
The move signals a shift from isolated hardware to integrated, secure systems where software, networks, and hardware work together to protect missions. In drone operations spanning reconnaissance, logistics, and disaster response, secure connectivity and resilience under cyber stress are now non-negotiable.
Buyers are increasingly seeking field-proven, interoperable platforms that can be deployed quickly and upgraded as threats evolve. Mobilicom’s AUSA presence illustrates how cybersecurity has moved from afterthought to a core criterion in modern drone programs.
For defense planners, the message is unmistakable: security is a baseline capability now, not an optional add-on.
Conclusion
As drones take on more critical roles in defense and industry, vendors offering integrated, secure stacks stand to lead. Mobilicom’s AUSA 2025 reveal signals a broader shift toward secure, scalable drone operations and sets a benchmark for future procurement decisions.






















