Give any object
artificial memory.
Every phone, watch, and earbud broadcasts a signal. Digital Tripwire is your silent witness. When something you protect is touched, moved, or taken, it logs every device that was there — encrypted, timestamped, court-ready.
Be less Watson.
More Holmes.
Sherlock solved cases by spotting the clue everyone else walked past. Digital Tripwire hides that clue in everything you own — and it never blinks.
Your AirTag found the bag.
It can't find the thief.
The moment someone pulls the tracker off and tosses it, you're tracking a trash can. Location isn't evidence. Presence is.
GPS trackers give you a dot on a map. They can't tell you who picked your item up, when it was touched, or prove any of it later. The chain of evidence ends the second the tracker is found.
Digital Tripwire logs the MAC address, signal strength, distance, and timestamp of every device within range the instant your item is disturbed. The thief's own phone becomes the witness against them.
Two silent witnesses.
One forensic network.
The command center
for everything you own.
A wedge of glass on your counter that watches everything. The live dashboard shows every device near your home, maps your grain-of-rice sensor nodes room by room, and logs it all to the forensic chain. If someone gets close to what's yours, you'll know exactly who.
Evidence that fits
on a keychain.
Clip it to your bag, drop it in your car, slide it into a jacket pocket. Digital Tripwire Mobile sleeps until something moves it, then wakes and captures every device nearby. Dormant for years on one battery. Watching the entire time.
Three steps. Zero effort.
No configuration. No charging. No tech skills. Place it and forget it — until the day you need it.
Place it
Your car, your bag, your kid's backpack, behind the TV. Scan the QR code to register it to your account. Done in ninety seconds.
Forget it
The device sleeps, sending a heartbeat ping every 15 minutes. Years of battery. No maintenance. It just watches.
Know who
Something happens? Open the app. Every device that was near your item is logged with time, distance, and signal. Export it. Hand it to police.
Your home. Protected
from the inside.
Every tracker ships with 10 grain-of-rice nodes. Hide them in what matters — a disturbed node silently wakes your tracker, which logs every device in range. Tap a node to see what it protects, or run the demo and watch a break-in get logged in real time.
She didn't check in
after work.
Before leaving the office, she set a 15-minute check-in. One tap in the app. Dark parking garages. Late night walks. Anytime she wants someone watching her back.
If she doesn't confirm she's safe within 15 minutes, her 5 trusted contacts are notified instantly — with her location and full proximity logs, ready to export to police.
- One-tap check-in timer
- 5 trusted emergency contacts
- Auto-alert with location + proximity data
- Full log export for law enforcement
- Works without Wi-Fi via LTE-M
They can strip it.
They can't erase it.
They chopped your car into parts. Changed the VIN. Sold it piece by piece at three different shops across two states. None of that matters.
Every Digital Tripwire device has a hidden UV-reactive QR code, invisible to the naked eye. Shine a blacklight, scan it with any phone, and it pulls up the registered owner, the full proximity log, and a chain of custody that holds up in court.
The parts don't need to be whole. They just need to be yours.
- Invisible UV QR tied to your account
- Works on individual parts, not just whole items
- Links directly to the proximity evidence log
- Scannable by any phone with a blacklight
Evidence they can't erase.
A chain they can't break.
Every scan is cryptographically linked to the one before it. Alter a single byte and the chain flags it. This is what makes a log admissible instead of arguable.
sha256: 4be2…91aa
sha256: f30c…d881
What actually holds up
in court?
We asked former FBI forensics investigators, federal prosecutors, and family court judges. They'd never seen BLE proximity data used as evidence. Until now.
Nizar Balil
Lisa Pyle
Marquis Jones
Not a tracker.
A different category entirely.
Global coverage.
Local intelligence.
Wherever your asset goes, Digital Tripwire keeps building the one thing GPS trackers can't: a memory of who and what came near it. Quietly connected. Always protecting.
Choose your protection.
Hardware plus cloud service. No hidden fees. Cancel anytime.
- One device, full app access
- Auto-saved proximity logs
- CSV / JSON evidence export
- Check-in monitoring
- 15-minute heartbeat pings
- Everything in Protection
- Manage up to 20 devices
- One centralized dashboard
- Priority alert routing
- Family location sharing
- Everything in Plus
- Unlimited devices
- API integrations
- Custom alerting rules
- Dedicated support
Questions, answered.
AirTags and Tile are finders — they tell you where something is. Digital Tripwire is an evidence device — it tells you who was near your item when it was disturbed. It logs every Bluetooth and Wi-Fi device in range, encrypts the data, and uploads it via LTE-M direct to the cloud. No phone relay required.
Every scan captures MAC addresses of nearby BLE and Wi-Fi devices, signal strength for distance estimation, device type classification, GPS coordinates, and precise timestamps — all cryptographically chained and encrypted before transmission.
Digital Tripwire captures publicly broadcast wireless signals — the same BLE and Wi-Fi advertisements every device around you is already transmitting. Data is collected passively, encrypted, and hash-chained for integrity verification. The forensic architecture is designed to meet requirements for digital evidence admissibility.
Yes. Digital Tripwire uses LTE-M cellular connectivity to transmit data directly to the cloud. No phone relay, no Wi-Fi, no Apple or Google network. Completely independent — which is exactly what makes it reliable as evidence.
Your data is your data. You control it, you export it, you decide who sees it. If you choose to share logs with law enforcement, the chain-of-custody export provides forensic-standard documentation. There is no backdoor access for anyone.
The Case of
the Misplaced Hat.
Holmes returns home. The hat hangs on the wrong hook. The jacket is creased where it shouldn't be. The magnifying glass sits an inch from where he left it. Someone was here — and every object remembers who. Watch Holmes reconstruct it, minute by minute, node by node.