C-UAS and RF. On the record.
Monthly intelligence and buyer-side tools. For procurement officers, security directors, and agency planners working in C-UAS and the broader RF spectrum.
Counter-UAS and the RF spectrum, both live. Two public-record trackers, a monthly brief, and buyer-side tools, running today.
Tracked, modeled, and summarized from the public record.
Regulatory tracking
Federal and state C-UAS authority, tracked from primary sources and updated as laws change. Who can deploy what, where.
Recently tracked: Alabama's prison-drone act, Tennessee's UAS surveillance law, Illinois's Freedom from Drone Surveillance Act, Texas Chapter 423, and Florida's critical-infrastructure preemption. Browse the full fifty-state picture.
The four trackers
Regulatory is live. Deployments and awards are in development, each built from the public record before it goes on the site.
Cost modeling
A total cost of ownership model built from public procurement data, for five and ten year deployment planning by site profile.
The monthly Brief
One email a month on what moved in C-UAS, every item tied to its public source. No fluff, no vendor pitches.
The RF pillar
Radar, SIGINT, EW, and spectrum monitoring, aggregated the same way, live now.
The spectrum that governs the drone fight
The RF bands that decide how drones fly and how they are detected, plotted by true frequency. Every band traces to a tracked rule and its primary public source. Tap one.
Five tracked bands. The 2.4 GHz ISM band is not shown: no tracked rule governs it. Empty is honest.
Monthly intelligence. Curated. Cited.
C-UAS deployments, federal awards, grant openings, regulatory shifts, and what they mean for procurement. No fluff. No vendor pitches.
Business email required. Free.
CUAS Brief: the federal map resets, 40-plus states on the board.
Two executive orders in June 2025 stood up a federal counter-UAS task force and pushed the FAA toward routine BVLOS, and the FY2026 NDAA reauthorized the core DHS and DOJ mitigation authority under 6 U.S.C. 124n and moved to extend it to state, local, and tribal partners. Legal mitigation still comes down to four federal authorities. More than 40 states now have a UAS statute, though state law mostly governs where drones fly and who can watch, not active interdiction.
Read latestBuilt from public data. Vendor-neutral.
C-UAS Total Cost of Ownership Model
Five and ten-year deployment costs by site profile, modality, and staffing model. Cost ranges sourced from public procurement data.
Run the modelRegulatory Authority Tracker
Who can deploy what, where. Federal and state authority for C-UAS, by agency, sector, and venue type. Updated as laws change.
Open trackerThe State of Counter-UAS, 2026 First Half
A public-source briefing on the federal framework, the fifty-state picture, SIGINT and RF spectrum, and the first $250M in federal grants. Free with a work email.
Get the reportRogue River Tech publishes monthly intelligence and operates buyer-side tools for North American procurement officers, security directors, and agency planners. Coverage spans counter-UAS and the RF spectrum: Radar, SIGINT, EW, and Spectrum Monitoring, tracked against the public record.