Skip to main content
Platform

The digital infrastructure layer for New Space.

A secure, modular, standards-aligned platform for structuring space assets, coordinating operations across organizations, and embedding trust into the protocol stack itself — rather than retrofitting it later.

Overview

Infrastructure first. Coordination by design.

The platform is a layered digital infrastructure for the New Space economy. It turns fragmented information into structured, governable assets; coordinates supply, demand, and operations across organizations; and provides cryptographic assurance that the actors, data, and workflows behind every transaction can be trusted.

It is engineered for the realities of mission-critical environments — sovereign deployment, allied interoperability, dual-use commercial and defense workloads, and alignment with USSF, NATO, NASA, ESA, MITRE, and NIST reference frameworks.

Capability Layers

Three foundations, one coherent stack.

The platform is organized as a stack of cooperating layers — each independently composable, each governed by the same trust and interoperability contracts.

01 · Structure

Assets & data

Turn heterogeneous space-domain information — telemetry, imagery, capacity, services, intent — into structured, discoverable, verifiable digital assets ready to participate in markets and workflows.

02 · Coordinate

Workflows & agents

Compose discovery, negotiation, routing, and execution into auditable workflows. Human operators and machine-to-machine agents share the same coordination surface and the same accountability model.

03 · Assure

Trust & governance

Provenance, cryptographic identity, access control, and policy enforcement are part of the protocol — not a separate stack to wire up later. Compliance posture travels with the asset.

Digital infrastructure is not a support layer. It determines how quickly new markets form, how safely assets circulate, and how confidently institutions can act.

What it enables

Core capabilities, built once, composed many ways.

01 · Registry

Asset & data registry

A canonical, governance-aware registry for space-domain assets, services, and datasets — with provenance, lineage, and access policy attached at the record level.

02 · Identity

Identity & access

Cryptographic identities for organizations, operators, sensors, and software agents. Fine-grained access control aligned with allied and dual-use compliance.

03 · Coordination

Marketplace & routing

The coordination layer for discovery, exchange, and intelligent routing of supply and demand across operators, jurisdictions, and mission profiles.

04 · Intelligence

Intelligence & agents

Pattern detection, decision support, and machine-to-machine coordination — operating under the same auditing and policy regime as human workflows.

05 · Compliance

Compliance & assurance

Policy, classification, and export-control posture (ITAR/EAR-aware) travel with the asset and are enforced at the protocol layer, not the application surface.

06 · Interop

Interoperability fabric

Standards-aligned adapters that connect commercial, civil, and defense environments without forcing any of them to compromise their operating model.

Read deeper

Where to go from here.

Architecture

Layered system architecture, secure-by-design principles, and deployment topology across cloud and sovereign edge environments.

Modules

The component catalog — what the platform is composed of, and how modules combine into mission-specific solutions.

Marketplace

The coordination layer for discovery, exchange, trusted transactions, and intelligent routing across the space economy.

Standards

Alignment with USSF, NATO, NASA, ESA, MITRE, NIST, and European regulatory frameworks including NIS2, DORA, and the AI Act.

Security overview

Posture across space cyber and defense — provenance, cryptography, access control, and resilience by architecture.

Engage

Build on infrastructure that takes trust seriously.

Operators, institutions, agencies, and partners — if you are designing for sovereign, allied, or dual-use environments, we'd like to compare notes.