63SATS Cybertech, the cybersecurity business unit of 63 Moons Technologies, is working with two airports for a solution to combat GPS-spoofing, a very major threat to the aviation industry, a top official in the cybersecurity firm said.
“We do have a solution from Israel that we are actively piloting with two airports in India,” Srinivas L, Joint MD & CEO of 63SATS Cybertech, told businessline, adding that Noida International Airport was one of its customers.
“Anything that’s got to do with national security, we are first to arrive there,” he said.
Srinivas explained that GPS spoofing works by transmitting a fake GPS signal from the ground that is stronger than the real signals sent by satellites. Aircraft normally rely on weak signals from satellites thousands of kilometres away. But when a stronger, false signal is broadcast, the aircraft’s systems can pick that up instead.
As a result, the plane believes it is in a different location than it actually is. This can also mislead air traffic control, which may see the aircraft positioned somewhere it isn’t.
Last December GPS spoofing was detected at major Indian airports including Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru.
The proliferation of connected devices, especially in homes, and the increasing threats from that, has also prompted 63SATS to develop solutions for it under the CYBX brand, its superapp. “It is about convenience versus security. That’s the toughest piece to solve said Srinivas.
“So the next two to three years you will see a lot of IPs coming out of our stable,” he added.
The company has also rolled out an upgraded version of CYBX positioning it as an all-in-one solution for consumers.
The new version integrates multiple security layers—ranging from encrypted calling and Wi-Fi protection to defence against over 100 attack vectors. Srinivas said the app was seeing good traction clocking 7 lakh downloads and blocking nearly 1.4 million cyberattacks within a month of its initial launch in August 2025.
Beyond retail users, 63SATS operates across enterprise and government segments through its ‘Cyber Security Force’ and ‘Cyberdome’ platforms.
The company is also working with several state government bodies for securing the energy infrastructure network and providing AI cybersecurity, said Srinivas, adding that talks are on with the governments of Gujarat, UP, Haryana and Tamil Nadu. “Now what we are doing is primarily focusing where it will hurt the most, which is the energy sector, the telecom sector, specialising in OT (operational technology) security.”
In its enterprise business 63SATS has tied up with top notch global brands such as Palo Alto, Check Point and Fortinet for providing cybersecurity solutions to customers across sectors such as BFSI, manufacturing, automotive and critical infrastructure.
Published on April 14, 2026
























