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Policing Technology Summit 2025 Lights Up New Era For Forces

Policing Technology Summit 2025 Lights Up New Era For Forces

Policing Technology Summit 2025 Lights Up New Era For Forces

Policing Technology Summit 2025 Lights Up New Era For Forces

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Police Technology Summit (PTS) 2025 to be hosted at RRU Pasighat Campus on 8 November

Rashtriya Raksha University (RRU), an Institution of National Importance under the Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India, announces the Police Technology Summit (PTS) 2025 to be held on 08 November 2025 at the RRU Pasighat campus.

RRU is a specialised university created to provide training, research and education in policing, internal security, and strategic studies. Holding this summit at its Pasighat campus shows RRU’s reach beyond its Gujarat base and its commitment to pan-India security education. The Summit will spotlight cutting-edge technologies for SMART Policing ,from AI-driven policing and OSINT to drone/anti-drone systems, predictive policing, cybercrime mitigation, digital investigations, smart surveillance, and the modernization of police operations.

Globally, law enforcement agencies are increasingly using AI, predictive analytics, open-source intelligence (OSINT) and drone systems to enhance effectiveness and efficiency of policing. For example, studies highlight how “innovative tools or torments?” must be assessed carefully as policing technology evolves. So the summit’s focus matches a clear trend in policing worldwide toward tech-enabled operations.

Organised by RRU with the support of AIC‑RRU Incubation Foundation (AIM, NITI Aayog), PTS 2025 will convene police and CAPF leadership, state and district police units, policy makers, start-ups, researchers, and solution providers to accelerate technology adoption for internal security.  The involvement of an incubation foundation shows emphasis on start-ups and innovation in policing tech. Earlier editions of PTS have already had exhibitors focusing on cyber intelligence and digital risk management.  This kind of collaboration helps bridge the gap between technology developers and policing agencies.


AI for policing; open-source intelligence; counter-drone & tactical comms; cybercrime investigation & SOC readiness; digital forensics; smart surveillance & field mobility; tech-enabled training and simulations. These theme tracks mirror current needs of police forces: for instance, cybercrime investigation and digital forensics are growing demands as more crime moves online. The education field reports how analytics, drone tech, and digital forensics are becoming standard in modern policing.

Live demos of India-made innovations aligned to policing needs, including secure communications, agentic AI, cyber ranges, VR/AR/MR training tools, blockchain forensics, quantum-safe security, and environmental/field sensors. The use of VR/AR/MR for training police and security personnel is an emerging global practice—they help simulate field conditions in a safe environment. Also, “quantum-safe security” is a growing area to future-proof communications. The summit giving demos helps practitioners see and test technologies rather than just hear about them.

Practical deployments for beat officers, investigators, traffic and crowd management units, anti-human trafficking cells, cyber police stations, and disaster/HADR coordination.  Use-case sessions help show how the technology applies in real operations. For example, traffic and crowd management units benefit from smart surveillance and analytics; anti-human-trafficking requires collaboration, data, OSINT. Having sessions for different units helps tailor technology adoption.


A curated line-up of emerging and established providers will present deployable solutions, including Roombr, TheMoe, HyperLab, FaceTagr, Mobisec, Helios Dynamic, Resecurity, Siddhi Engineers, SWASEMI, Viralhit, Zindagi Technologies, ScopX, QNu Labs, Tactilink, Tactix, BeyonData, and Phronetic AI. One exhibitor, Resecurity, has already announced that it will exhibit at PTS 2025 focusing on AI-powered intelligence and cybersecurity solutions.  The presence of both start-ups and established tech firms shows that policing technology is not just about large vendors but agile innovation too.

Senior police leadership, unit heads (cyber, CCTNS, traffic, training), investigators and DFIR teams, command-and-control operators, CAPFs, state home departments, procurement and modernization cells, start-ups, researchers, and academia focused on national security technology. Engaging such a wide and diverse audience ensures that technology adoption covers strategy (leadership), operations (unit heads), technical teams (cyber, DFIR), and innovation ecosystem (start-ups, academia). This holistic approach is important as policing becomes more technology-driven.

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