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Drones and AI Technology Will be Used in the 2026 World Cup
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Drones and AI Technology Will be Used in the 2026 World Cup

2026-01-09

The platform can integrate video and other forms of data generated by law enforcement drones, with data streams from other sources. The relevant information can then be sent to command centers and officers on the ground who can view it on their smart phones or other portable screens.
One feature of the Booz Allen platform makes it an attractive alternative for law enforcement agencies and event organizers is its relative simplicity in terms of security personnel being able to rapidly adopt and implement it. “It can be started up fairly quickly. It can be put on a device of any kind, and it will take minutes for you or I to be taught how to use it,” Ghattas said. The Booz Allen platform can help keep the skies above U.S.-based events safe by tracking and identifying UAVs to determine which ones belong in the air and which ones do not.“Using the technology, ingesting the data, we can detect drones, we can help identify drones, and we can help track drones as well,” Ghattas said. That information will prove to be of tremendous value to law enforcement as they try to figure out whether airspace above an event venue is being populated by drones and whether those drones are a threat, he said.

“When law enforcement puts up a UAS, we can ingest data from that UAS system so that the user can see where all the drones that are up in the sky. And using artificial intelligence, we help them determine what might be a threat,” he said.

The platform can help law enforcement personnel determine the flight patterns of drones that have been identified as potential threats. The system then uses artificial intelligence (AI) tools to sift through the vast amounts of data collected, and analyze that data in a way that allows the commanders on the ground to make quick decisions about where to position their people and resources in order to deal with the perceived threat.