ITL-12 CONSULTING SERVICE
Electronic Intelligence
Corporate espionage and hostile interference operate in a spectrum nobody sees: spoofed positioning signals, drones over the perimeter, cameras and microphones the size of a button. Those who don't monitor the spectrum only find out after the damage is done.
The problem
Surveillance and interference equipment has become cheap and accessible: GSM listening devices for tens of dollars, cameras hidden in everyday objects, GPS jammers used to defeat cargo tracking, and drones capable of filming, carrying, or colliding. Meeting rooms where mergers are decided, perimeters of critical facilities, and entire fleets depend on an electromagnetic space that traditional security — physical or cyber — does not see.
How we work
Sweeps for hidden cameras and listening devices (TSCM)
Technical surveillance countermeasures in meeting rooms, executive offices, leadership residences, and vehicles: spectrum sweeps for active transmitters, detection of dormant devices and non-emitting recorders, specialized physical inspection, and verification of lines and equipment. Indicated before sensitive negotiations, upon concrete suspicion, and as a periodic routine for critical environments.
GNSS/GPS interference and spoofing detection
Detection architectures for jamming and spoofing of satellite positioning signals, for operations that depend on trustworthy location — fleets, vessels, aviation, and logistics — with dedicated sensors, signal integrity analysis, and real-time alerting.
Drone detection
Monitoring of unmanned aircraft over sensitive perimeters and facilities, including decoding of standardized remote identification protocols, with trajectory logging and recurrence correlation — direct input for physical security and for the legal response.
RF device security assessment
An in-house software-defined radio laboratory to assess the wireless devices surrounding the operation — access controls, alarms, telemetry, proprietary links: controlled verification of signal capture, replay, and forgery, with demonstration of the real impact.
Integration with counterintelligence
Spectrum findings feed the protective intelligence work: who would have the interest, what is the likely vector, and which procedural changes reduce the exposure — because finding the bug is the beginning of the work, not the end.
Applied experience
A capability built on hands-on depth in software-defined radio, embedded systems, and spectrum analysis — including applied experience in maritime and navigation contexts — combined with training in counterintelligence and information protection techniques.
Frequently asked questions
Are bug sweeps legal? What if we find a device?
Defensive sweeping of your own environment is fully legal — what is illegal is intercepting other people's communications, which we do not do. If a device is found, the correct conduct is to preserve it as evidence, document the chain of custody, and engage legal counsel for notification to the authorities; the report we deliver is built to support exactly that path.
When does a TSCM sweep make sense?
In three scenarios: before high-stakes meetings and negotiations (mergers, corporate disputes, strategic decisions); upon concrete suspicion — information leaking that only circulated in one room; and as a periodic routine for permanently critical environments, such as boardrooms. A single sweep gives you a snapshot; real protection comes from combining periodic sweeps with procedural discipline.
Is GPS interference a real risk?
Yes, and a growing one. Cheap jammers used to defeat cargo tracking affect everything around them, and large-scale interference episodes already impact aviation and navigation in several regions of the world. Operations that depend on positioning — logistics, fleets, offshore, agribusiness — currently have little or no ability to detect when they are under interference; that is exactly the gap dedicated detection closes.
Need a conversation about Electronic Intelligence?
Describe the scenario in two lines. We'll answer with an honest read — including if the answer is that you don't need us.