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CybersecurityDrones

Why the key to American drone dominance lies with blockchain

By
Mike Horton
Mike Horton
and
Adam Winnick
Adam Winnick
Down Arrow Button Icon
By
Mike Horton
Mike Horton
and
Adam Winnick
Adam Winnick
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 26, 2026, 9:01 AM ET

The drone threat is no longer confined to distant battlefields. It is coming to American soil, and the targets are no longer necessarily military targets. Critical infrastructure – airports, power plants, and major public events, as well as military bases – are all prime targets for anyone looking to unleash chaos and undermine national security. 

To understand how we got here, it is important to understand China’s dominance of the global commercial drone market. Shenzhen-based DJI churns out thousands of drones every day and accounts for 70% of all commercial drones sold globally. This means the very drones purchased and deployed by American institutions, from public utilities to local law enforcement, are built with Chinese-made hardware, firmware, cloud dependencies, and proprietary geofencing logic. This also means Beijing controls how drones navigate, authenticate themselves, and respect sensitive airspaces – a major obstacle to securing American skies.

The U.S. now has a once-in-a-generation opportunity to address this urgent national security threat. With the import and sale of DJI and other foreign-made drones now effectively banned in the U.S., the federal government must fundamentally rewrite the architecture that defines how domestically-produced drones interoperate with critical infrastructure and regulated airspace. And while the prospect of simply replacing DJI with an American vendor is appealing, a truly secure drone ecosystem requires more than just a product swap. Instead, the U.S. must embrace a technological foundation anchored in blockchain. 

Blockchain can support a neutral trust layer for airspace that’s immutable, decentralized, and cryptographically verifiable, one that’s both uniquely suited to challenges of coordination, verification, and enforcement that define airspace security and not controlled by any single source, foreign or otherwise. Without it, the U.S. risks replicating the same strategic vulnerability that defined China’s drone dominance, just with another vendor in full control. 

The Blockchain Solution

Securing American airspace will require a seismic shift across the domestic drone ecosystem. Open protocols must replace closed, proprietary systems. Tamper-proof data must replace mutable firmware rules. Cryptographically verifiable location must replace unverifiable GPS claims, while domestic geofencing standards should be governed in the open. All of these systems must be rooted in trusted hardware that can be audited.

An ecosystem built on these foundations would immediately strengthen U.S. national security on several fronts. Domestically, it would enable real-time, verifiable airspace trust around airports, energy infrastructure and other high-value targets increasingly vulnerable to drone incursions. For the U.S. Department of War, it would eliminate hidden hardware and supply chain risks that undermine military drone operations abroad. A secure, open drone stack would also catalyze domestic manufacturing and technological competitiveness, positioning American companies to lead globally on transparent, exportable standards for drones and autonomy.

Such an ecosystem demands a public, tamper-proof ledger for the data that actually matters, including geofence boundaries, authentication of drones and base stations, GNSS correction data, Remote ID and compliance logs, and airspace permissions and constraints.

Only blockchain combines the properties needed at national scale. Decentralization removes single points of control and failure. Cryptographic integrity ensures data cannot be altered after the fact. Transparency allows standards and rules to be audited instead of buried inside firmware. And incentivize alignment makes it economically viable for private actors to help build and maintain national Positioning, Navigation and Timing (PNT) infrastructure. In practice, this means prioritizing high-performance, low-cost Layer 1 blockchain infrastructure like Solana and other newer chains like Sui, Base, and Monad whose transaction speed and minimal execution overhead can support real-time airspace coordination while distributing tokenized rewards to PNT infrastructure operators at a scale and frequency legacy banking rails were not designed to support. 

When implemented effectively, a blockchain-based airspace trust system would transform how drones operate across the country. National geofence zones could be published as signed, on-chain data rather than opaque databases. Drones could be required to consume digitally signed correction and location data, making spoofing and manipulation far more difficult. Regulatory enforcement could be embedded directly into flight control logic. And PNT infrastructure could be distributed, resilient, and resistant to disruption.

Political and Technological Forces Converge

This opportunity is defined by the convergence of forces that rarely align. Regulatory pressures like the DJI ban are the most obvious driver, but policy has shifted just as dramatically: the current administration has explicitly identified blockchain as a strategic economic priority, giving federal agencies room to experiment with blockchain-backed infrastructure standards rather than defaulting to vendor-driven solutions.

In addition, blockchain technology is now mature enough to address this need. Decentralized satellite networks tied to blockchain are already operating at scale, with thousands of live reference stations streaming centimeter-grade correction data. Blockchain systems routinely secure assets and infrastructure with reliability that rivals (or exceeds) traditional centralized models.

To build a trust-first, blockchain-secured drone ecosystem, the U.S. government can  adopt blockchain-backed geofencing standards, integrate decentralized PNT into counter-drone and infrastructure protection strategies, incentive private-sector deployment of trusted reference stations, and certify next-generation navigation modules built on open, verifiable systems. 

The DJI ban is not the end of an era – it is the beginning of one. If America wants safe skies, protected infrastructure, and a competitive drone industry, it must seize this moment.

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About the Authors
By Mike Horton
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Adam Winnick
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