Covert surveillance has industrialised. The apparatus required to listen, to observe, or to track a private conversation has fallen, in cost and in size, beneath the threshold at which institutions can rely on physical perimeter alone. Executives, principals, counsel, journalists, and operators of consequence find themselves in environments that no longer warrant the trust their predecessors took for granted.

SPYNO is a hand-held instrument engineered to restore that trust on the terms its user requires. The product detects covert surveillance — across radio-frequency, optical, and acoustic vectors — and, where appropriate, neutralises it. Sovereignty over one's own conversation, in a manufactured form.

The premise of the device

Existing counter-surveillance equipment is the province of specialists — large, conspicuous, and operated by trained sweep teams. The principal in motion does not have access to a sweep team in the back of a car or the corner of a hotel room. SPYNO inverts the premise: a personal device, operated by the principal directly, in the rhythm of a working day.

What the device does

The customers

The market is the principal whose conversations matter: senior executives in transit, family-office principals, attorneys travelling with privileged material, journalists working in compromised environments, sovereign and quasi-sovereign actors. SPYNO is positioned as the standard piece of personal equipment for those for whom privacy is a working condition, not a preference.