July 2026 — R. Andrew Kingston, President and CEO of StealthPath, is a confirmed speaker at the Aerospace Global Forum Technology Summit at Farnborough International Airshow 2026 (20–24 July) — the world’s largest aerospace industry event.
The workshop — The Cyber Poverty Gap — runs Thursday 23 July, 14:00–15:45, Innovate 1, Hall 1. The panel brings together Wendy Nather (1Password), originator of the “security poverty line” concept; Martin Smye-Rumsby (BAE Systems Space) on space and cyber; StealthPath on operational technology; and Celia Soares (Janus Henderson Investors) on investment and systemic risk. The workshop is supported by Space ISAC, UK-CYSPACE, Aiion Aerospace, Willis Research Network, and CARS — Imperial College London. StealthPath contributed to the workshop agenda. Alexander Kingston, Chief Technology Officer, and Adam Norris, Head of DevSecOps, will participate in the workshop.
The workshop takes its name from Wendy Nather’s “security poverty line” — the threshold below which organisations cannot achieve basic cybersecurity regardless of what solutions exist. In operational technology, the gap is acute: most critical infrastructure operators cannot see what is on their own networks, and achieving that visibility is far more complex than it appears. Air-gapped environments, legacy control systems, no specialist staff, no procurement pathway — the structural barriers compound across the resource-constrained facilities, suppliers, and operators that the current cybersecurity market does not reach. Across defence supply chains, aerospace, and space systems, those are the nodes that create systemic risk: interconnected systems are only as secure as their weakest link. OT is now at the frontline of what senior government officials have described as an undeclared cyber war, with state actors positioning inside civilian infrastructure networks.
Six independent regulatory frameworks — including CI Fortify in the United States, the Security of Critical Infrastructure Act in Australia, and the Cyber Security and Resilience Bill in the United Kingdom — are converging on the same response: mandatory visibility, and the capacity to sustain operations when connectivity is compromised or deliberately severed. Drawing on operational experience across defence manufacturing and critical infrastructure, the presentation examines the structural barriers that prevent more than two hundred thousand facilities from meeting these requirements — and poses the design question to the room.
The Aerospace Global Forum Technology Summit at Farnborough convenes the defence primes, government delegations, and institutional investors who operate, regulate, and fund the infrastructure the presentation addresses. StealthPath continues to build its presence, demonstrate its products, and engage with operators across the markets it serves.
About StealthPath
StealthPath delivers passive cybersecurity for air-gapped operational technology networks across critical infrastructure. The StealthCommand platform provides complete, attested, and comparable visibility into environments that existing architectures cannot reach— without active probing, cloud connectivity, or specialist operators. Developed with the support of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Deployed across water, power, and transportation infrastructure with a 100% license renewal rate over four years. Protected by a 27-filing patent portfolio. Headquartered in the United States with a representative office in the United Kingdom and a research partnership with Imperial College London. www.stealthpath.com.
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