HawkEye 360 Releases Dark
Ship Maritime Analytics
April 25, 2022
HawkEye 360 Inc.,
released a new maritime association analytics
capability which analyzes RF signal geolocations and
third-party global AIS maritime geolocations to
provide insight into potential dark ship activity in
key areas of interest (AOI) across the world. The
maritime insights enable organizations to understand
anomalies in the maritime domain and more
effectively employ other collection and surveillance
modalities to gather intelligence. This capability
will allow coast guards, navies, law enforcement,
fisheries, and non-profit organizations to increase
maritime domain awareness and quickly identify RF
activity that cannot be attributed to publicly
identifiable maritime activity.
"Finding dark vessels and
illicit maritime activity shouldn't involve endless
trial and error and manual analysis with various
data sources," said Tim Pavlick, Vice President of
Product, Design and AI. "HawkEye 360 is transforming
Multi-INT sources into critical insights and
creating analytic tools that multiply the value of
RF monitoring by an order of magnitude, allowing
analysts to gain a more holistic understanding of
areas and events that matter most to them."
The algorithm analyzes the
temporal and spatial attributes for AIS and HawkEye
360 data sets to automatically associate RF signal
geolocations and with vessels' AIS data. If there
are high probability matches, then those
geolocations are associated with Maritime Mobile
Service Identity (MMSI) numbers and tagged with
numeric scores. If there are no associations, the RF
geolocations are flagged as DarkRF.
"Illicit activities at sea
continue to rise, costing global economies billions
of dollars and threatening global security," said
Chief Growth Officer, Alex Fox. "HawkEye 360's
unique capability can detect and geolocate dark ship
activity across the globe and provide trusted
analytics to support enforcement and prosecution
associated with these activities.
Our subscription services to monitor millions of
square kilometers of ocean to detect activities such
as illegal fishing, which alone costs the global
economy $10-$24 billion dollars per year."
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