Ukraine’s The Fourth Law Secures Investment From Axon to Scale Drone AI for Frontline, Air Defense

Kyiv-based defense tech firm The Fourth Law has secured strategic backing from US public safety giant Axon to accelerate AI-powered drone autonomy used by more than 50 Ukrainian military units.

Kyiv-based defense technology company The Fourth Law (TFL) has secured a new round of funding backed by US public safety technology group Axon (Nasdaq: AXON), as Ukraine’s battlefield-driven drone innovation continues to draw international investment.

The size of the investment was not disclosed. The funding will be directed toward research and development of new autonomy capabilities aimed at countering Shahed-type strike drones and protecting cities and critical infrastructure, according to the company. 

The company’s most recently launched product, TFL-AntiShahed is a module for interceptor drones that uses Edge AI to detect and highlight strike drones like Russian-Iranian Shahed and Geran much faster than a human eye can see.

Founded in 2023, TFL develops AI-powered autonomy systems for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) used by more than 50 Ukrainian military units across multiple sections of the front line.

Its flagship products include the Lupynis-10-TFL-1 UAV and the TFL-1 autonomy module. The company wrote in a press release that its first-level autonomy increases first-person view (FPV) drone mission success rates by two to four times, while adding 10 percent to unit cost.

AI leads the battlefield and saves lives in war against Russia

TFL’s autonomy technology is designed to function across multiple platforms, rather than being limited to proprietary systems.

In addition to its own Lupynis-10 platform, the company’s AI modules have been integrated with dozens of third-party UAV manufacturers and can be installed on different airframes, ground control stations, and connectivity architectures.

The system is aimed at improving interception rates amid sustained Russian aerial attacks targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and urban centers.

Axon is interested in Ukraine’s defense ecosystem

Yaroslav Azhnyuk, founder and chief executive of The Fourth Law, described the investment as a milestone for Ukrainian defense technology firms.

“We’re proud to announce that we are obtaining additional support, including from Axon, and it is a major milestone on our mission of strengthening the defensibility of Ukraine and the Free World,” the press release quoted Azhnyuk as saying .

He added that Axon may be among the most prominent investors to back a Ukrainian defense tech company to date and said the new funding will focus on autonomy capabilities required to counter Shahed-type attacks.

According to the company, BRAVE1 facilitated introductions after a meeting between Axon’s Smith and Mykhailo Fedorov, Minister of Defense of Ukraine. Azhnyuk wrote that the initial contact with Axon came through BRAVE1, Ukraine’s government-backed defense tech cluster. 

Axon’s investment reflects a belief that drone development models emerging from Ukraine will have global relevance, according to Azhnyuk. 

Rick Smith, founder and CEO of Axon, pointed to the pace of Ukrainian battlefield innovation.

“Ukraine is innovating drone technology at a pace most of the world isn’t built to match,” the press release quoted Smith as saying, adding that systems in Ukraine are “built, tested, and improved in real time” under combat conditions.