Defence IT has a habit of hardening into sprawling, brittle stacks that are painful to update and even harder to untangle. As new tools and threats emerge, programmes often find themselves locked into vendors and architectures chosen years earlier. Defense Unicorns is trying to loosen that grip. The company builds open, secure software platforms that let mission systems plug in new capabilities without a full rebuild. By backing open architectures and avoiding heavy vendor lock-in, it aims to give defence teams room to swap components, integrate new services and keep pace with changing requirements. In a landscape where adaptability can matter as much as capability, that flexibility is the real selling point. CP
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Modern networks rely on encryption to secure data in transit, but traditional software-based approaches often introduce latency and increase power...

