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Terradepth Supports U.S. Navy Exercise with Ocean Data Integration and Edge Visualization Capabilities

Business

Terradepth Supports U.S. Navy Exercise with Ocean Data Integration and Edge Visualization Capabilities
Business

Business

Terradepth Supports U.S. Navy Exercise with Ocean Data Integration and Edge Visualization Capabilities

2026-07-08 03:13 Last Updated At:03:21

PANAMA CITY BEACH, Fla. & AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 7, 2026--

Terradepth today announced that it supported LANTERNFISH, a U.S. Navy exercise focused on evaluating technologies and workflows that may improve the organization, visualization, and use of ocean data in maritime operating environments.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260707691110/en/

As part of the exercise, Terradepth provided Absolute Ocean® (AO) and AO OnBoard™. Together, the technologies support the ingestion, organization, visualization, and secure sharing of ocean data from multiple sources across cloud and edge environments, helping authorized users move from raw data toward a common, decision-ready picture.

Terradepth’s role focused on the data layer: how ocean information can be integrated, organized, visualized, and delivered to authorized users in a way that supports analysis and planning without exposing sensitive operational details.

“LANTERNFISH is exactly the kind of environment where the ocean data problem becomes clear,” said Joe Wolfel, CEO and Co-Founder of Terradepth. “The challenge is not just collecting data. It is getting the right data from disparate acquisition channels into a usable form fast enough to matter. Absolute Ocean and AO OnBoard are built for that problem, connecting the cloud, the edge, and the mission team around the same operational picture.”

Absolute Ocean is Terradepth’s cloud-based platform for managing, visualizing, analyzing, and sharing ocean data. AO OnBoard extends those capabilities closer to the point of collection, supporting data management and visualization at the edge so teams can shorten the path between acquisition and operational use.

Terradepth’s participation reflects a broader shift underway in maritime operations. Ocean data must be persistent, accessible, interoperable, and useful across distributed teams. Terradepth is building the infrastructure layer to support that shift across defense, commercial, research, and critical infrastructure environments.

About Terradepth

Terradepth builds ocean data infrastructure for organizations that need to collect, manage, analyze, and act on ocean data at scale. The company’s Ocean Operating System™ brings together Absolute Ocean®, AO OnBoard™, autonomous ocean data collection, subsea mapping technologies, and secure data workflows to make ocean data more accessible, useful, and decision-ready for government, commercial, research, and infrastructure customers. For more information, visit www.terradepth.com.

Absolute Ocean® brings high-resolution bathymetry and subsea object data into a single geospatial environment, enabling authorized users to organize, visualize, share, and integrate ocean information from multiple collection sources as a common, decision-ready picture

Absolute Ocean® brings high-resolution bathymetry and subsea object data into a single geospatial environment, enabling authorized users to organize, visualize, share, and integrate ocean information from multiple collection sources as a common, decision-ready picture

ATLANTA (AP) — The U.S. Department of Justice cannot have the names and personal contact information for every person who worked during the 2020 election in Georgia’s Fulton County, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.

The Justice Department in April served a grand jury subpoena seeking the names and personal contact information of county employees and volunteer poll workers. President Donald Trump has long claimed without evidence that widespread voter fraud in Georgia's most populous county, a Democratic stronghold, cost him victory in the state in 2020.

Fulton County asked a judge to quash the subpoena, arguing it was meant to “target, harass and punish the President’s perceived political opponents” and that it was “grossly over broad and untethered to any reasonable need.”

“Given the low need for the subpoenaed information and the highly burdensome nature of the disclosure of the same, the Subpoena is unreasonable and must be quashed,” U.S. District Judge William Ray wrote in his ruling, calling the scope of the request “staggering.”

Fulton County Board of Commissioners Chairman Robb Pitts applauded the ruling.

“Fulton County will continue to do all that is needed to assure Georgia citizens that our election process is fair and proper and to show that the attacks against it are baseless,” he said in an emailed statement.

An email seeking comment was sent to the Justice Department.

While grand juries often work with federal prosecutors to investigate alleged crimes, “that does not give the DOJ the right to use the Grand Jury to do whatever the DOJ wants,” wrote Ray, who was nominated to the bench by Trump.

Even if the records sought by the Justice Department could help find people who worked for the county during the 2020 election who support the theory that the election was unfair, the information couldn't be used to charge anyone, Ray wrote.

“That is because the statute of limitations for any possible crime arising from the 2020 Election has long expired,” he wrote.

The subpoena came after the FBI in January served a search warrant at the Fulton County election hub and seized hundreds of boxes of ballots and other documents from the 2020 election. A federal judge in May denied the county's request to force the federal government to return the ballots.

The Justice Department argued in a court filing that the subpoena was the “next step in the normal investigative process” and that it seeks “records identifying persons with relevant knowledge.”

Kamal Ghali, a lawyer for the county, argued that the subpoena “will chill participation by election workers” and that the statute of limitations for any of the alleged misconduct had already lapsed.

Justice Department lawyer William McComb argued the statute of limitations issue is not relevant at the investigative stage. The point of the investigation is to figure out what charges can be brought, he said.

“My point is, as we sit here now, we are not sure what charges can be brought. That's the whole point of the investigation,” he said.

The judge noted that the Justice Department had expressed concern about possible criminal actions in the years that followed the election, including an alleged failure by the county to preserve electronic ballot images. But he pointed out that the subpoena seeks information related to what happened during the 2020 election and its immediate aftermath.

“In these hyper-political times in which we currently live, there are sure to be some who disagree with this decision because they believe the allegations of fraud in the 2020 Election and believe that ‘light’ should be brought to those claims,” Ray wrote.

He added that nothing prevents continued investigation into those allegations by people who believe those claims — such as Congress or even the Justice Department — but the power of the grand jury, “which exists to investigate potential crimes and to bring viable indictments” cannot be used for that purpose. Otherwise, anyone in power could use the grand jury process to subpoena personal information of citizens “with no legitimate law enforcement purpose,” he wrote.

“Thus, everyone, whether you support the President or you do not, or whether you believe the 2020 Election was fair or believe that it was not, should be concerned about the DOJ’s ability to utilize the power of the Grand Jury to appropriate your private information without a legitimate purpose,” Ray wrote.

FILE - Stickers sit on a table inside a polling place, Nov. 5, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)

FILE - Stickers sit on a table inside a polling place, Nov. 5, 2024, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson, File)

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