The Partnership That Defines Our Standard
In March 2018, DATAENFORCE began what has become a seven-year operational partnership with the Colombian National Police — one of the largest law enforcement agencies in Latin America, coordinating criminal investigation activities across 195 countries through its Criminal Investigation Directorate.
The partnership is not a pilot program or a proof-of-concept. It is an active, ongoing deployment of proprietary DATAENFORCE platforms in operational law enforcement environments, where the consequences of platform failure are measured in criminal cases lost, evidence compromised, and public safety degraded.
The Platforms in Operation
Four DATAENFORCE platforms have been delivered and are in active use by the Colombian National Police since the initial deployment:
DAEDALUS — Advanced malware and threat analysis platform. DAEDALUS was inaugurated in 2019 at the Centro de Capacidades para la Ciberseguridad de Colombia (C4), the National Police's cybersecurity operations centre in Bogotá. The inauguration was publicly announced by the National Police's own channels and covered by their institutional communications. DAEDALUS provides forensic-grade malware analysis, supporting judicial proceedings with technical evidence that meets the evidentiary standards required by Colombian law. Since its deployment, the platform has been recognised as a regional reference in mobile threat analysis, attracting interest from peer agencies across the Americas, Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.
CROSSBOW — Mobile threat detection platform. Deployed within the C4 infrastructure for the analysis of mobile devices in criminal investigation contexts — identifying spyware implants, malicious applications, and communication interception tools across Android and iOS devices without requiring client-side installation on the device under examination.
NOVACAST — Forensic web intelligence platform. Used for the investigation of online criminal infrastructure, including phishing campaigns, malware distribution networks, and digital identity fraud operations targeting Colombian citizens and institutions.
PROTECTIO — Child safety and online protection platform. PROTECTIO was among the earliest DATAENFORCE deployments with the National Police, with public operational use documented from 2014. The platform supports the National Police's mission to identify and disrupt networks engaged in the online exploitation of minors — an operational mandate that requires both technical precision and the highest standards of source protection.
Why Law Enforcement Deployments Define Commercial-Grade Security
Deploying cybersecurity platforms in law enforcement environments imposes constraints that no commercial enterprise deployment replicates.
Chain of custody requirements mean that every piece of data the platform handles must be demonstrably unaltered, with an auditable record of every access event. Operational security requirements mean that the platform itself must not generate observable network signals that could alert a subject under investigation. Judicial admissibility requirements mean that analysis outputs must meet evidentiary standards that can withstand cross-examination by defence counsel.
DATAENFORCE platforms are built to these constraints — not because they are a feature, but because law enforcement clients require them as baseline operational conditions.
A Reference That Has Crossed Borders
Since the initial deployment in 2018, DATAENFORCE platforms — particularly DAEDALUS — have attracted formal interest from law enforcement and government security agencies across five regions: the Americas, Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia.
This cross-regional interest is not the result of marketing activity. It is the result of peer agencies observing operational results in Colombia and seeking access to the same capability. For a cybersecurity company, there is no stronger validation than a law enforcement agency recommending your platform to its international counterparts based on operational performance.
The Architecture Decision That Makes This Possible
Every DATAENFORCE platform deployed with the Colombian National Police shares a common architectural principle: no third-party security components, no OEM engines, no external cloud dependencies. The analysis logic, detection algorithms, and forensic capabilities are built, maintained, and updated entirely in-house.
This is not a marketing position. It is an operational necessity when deploying in environments where the integrity of the platform itself is a condition of the legal validity of the evidence it produces.
The same architecture is available to government agencies and enterprise security teams through DATAENFORCE's commercial product portfolio. The platforms available today are the direct descendants of what has been running in operational law enforcement environments since 2018.