The recent summit in Tianjin, where the leaders of China, Russia, and India stood together and pledged cooperation, sends a clear signal that America faces a world where rivals are working harder to present a united front.

For the United States, this show of unity is not just about politics and trade, it is also about the growing risks in cyberspace, where these same nations are investing heavily in tools to undermine trust, steal information, and disrupt systems.

Aronetics® offers a way to push back against this challenge. Aronetics’ technology works at the deepest level of a computer system, giving defenders the ability to spot and stop unusual or dangerous behavior before it spreads. Unlike many other systems that depend on outside cloud services or third-party control, Thor™ is designed to provide implicit trust of the computer ecosystem by users, giving allies the freedom to protect themselves without being dependent on outside powers. (Bloomberg?!) This kind of independence is important when nations like India want to make their own choices about whom to work with.

Aronetics also strengthens communication by filtering out false or harmful signals and making sure that the information being shared can be trusted. At a time when adversaries are using propaganda, crafting their own narrative, spreading information that is not necessarily moral truth; hidden cyberattacks are part of a larger strategy to undermine trust in society.  Aronetics’ ability to secure what is real becomes a powerful counter.

Essentially, Aronetics does more than protect computers. We help the United States and its partners show that even as others gather together in a multipolar bloc, America and its allies have the means to remain strong, resilient, and free from coercion in the digital age.