Chengdu Sentry X Co., Ltdis committed to the continuous improvement of thecomprehensiveservice, become a society, customers, shareholders and employees long-term trust of the company. Our Company adhering to pirit of for the sake of customers, and win-win with customers , and through SentryX staff continuous innovation and development to provide first-class Drone interference the best choice,Drone jamming the best price,Drone jamming the approval,drone jamming equipment for enterprises , is what we have been working for. Details:A new medium for smugglingBeyond the threat of terrorism, many industries are seeing drones used as a new channel to transport traditional threats. For example, correctional facilities across the world are struggling to adapt to smuggling via drones. They are being used to sneak in drugs, cellphones, weapons and other contraband that were conventionally difficult to get past security. For example, two months ago a drone crashed into an Arizona state prison complex. The crash site was discovered by correctional officers who found that the drone was carrying 2 cellphones and several bags filled with marijuana. In a more extreme case from July, an inmate was able to escape from a South Carolina prison using tools secretly delivered using a drone. Investigators believe wire cutters were flown into the prison, and the inmate used them to cut through at least four fences.Overcoming obstacles for hackingDrones are also helping hackers overcome physical barriers. Drones can easily and covertly reach areas that seem hard to reach and/or well-protected. The recent growth of Internet of things (IoT) devices and their reputation for vulnerability make them perfect targets. Now, don't expect drones to fly over apartments and hack into smart refrigerators any time soon. However, imagine a scenario where a drone is used to penetrate the perimeter of an electrical distribution station and disrupt a smart grid. The "hacker drone" scenario may seem like science fiction until a maintenance crew finds a drone outfitted with a Raspberry Pi lodged in the air duct above your data center – a true story and real threat. Surveillance and espionageI am continually surprised by the drone concerns and anecdotes I hear from customers. For example, I did not expect financial services organizations to be worried about drones, but I am hearing quite the opposite. They fear drones could be used for surveillance and espionage. The same drone equipped with a 4K video camera that I bought off-the-shelf to record my friend's wedding could be used to gather intelligence about merger and acquisition activity, results shared at board meetings, or how cash is transported between bank branches.