Private Network Check Readiness - TeckNexus Solutions

Ericsson and OneLayer Join Forces to Boost Private Network Security

Discover how Ericsson's collaboration with OneLayer at the Global Utilities Innovation Center enhances security in private cellular networks for utilities.

Strengthening Security in Utility Networks through Innovative Collaboration

Ericsson, a global leader in telecommunications, has recently announced its collaboration with OneLayer, a pioneering firm specializing in securing private LTE/5G networks for enterprises. This partnership focuses on fortifying the security of mission-critical private cellular networks tailored for utilities at Ericsson’s Global Utilities Innovation Center located in Plano, Texas.

The Utilities Innovation Center: A Hub for Real-World Network Simulation

The Utilities Innovation Center serves as a comprehensive laboratory, catering specifically to the needs of the power, gas, and water sectors. It replicates a real utility network environment encompassing aspects like resource generation, transmission, distribution, and consumption. Koustuv Ghoshal, Vice President and Head of Utilities vertical business at Ericsson North America, highlights the center’s unique role. It acts as a collaborative platform where utilities, device manufacturers, and network experts jointly explore new use cases in a genuine operational setting, focusing on advancing security, resilience, and efficiency.

OneLayer’s Contribution to Enhanced Network Infrastructure Security


Ericsson’s pursuit of innovation led to its collaboration with OneLayer, aiming to augment the inherent security features of its network infrastructure. OneLayer introduces its proprietary technology, OneID, which addresses the challenges posed by the different protocols and topologies between cellular and traditional networks. The OneLayer Bridge platform integrates effortlessly, extending the capabilities of existing security and asset management tools to the cellular domain.

The Integration of OneLayer Bridge with Ericsson’s Infrastructure

The OneLayer Bridge platform and interface now serve as a vital component alongside Ericsson’s mission-critical private cellular network infrastructure. Utilities have the opportunity to test and evaluate this integration at the Ericsson Utilities Innovation Center before deploying it in their private network environments.

Advanced Security Features Unveiled by OneLayer and Ericsson

OneLayer’s integration with Ericsson‘s containerized applications and the dual-mode 5G Core network introduces advanced security features. These include detailed asset visibility and fingerprinting, context-based segmentation, anomaly detection, Zero Trust authentication, and geofencing.

Dave Mor, CEO of OneLayer, emphasizes the transformative impact of OneLayer on both security and operational capabilities within the utility sector, ranging from asset management to network optimization.

Experience the Collaboration at Ericsson’s Innovation Center

To witness the combined efforts of Ericsson and OneLayer, interested parties are encouraged to visit the Ericsson Global Utilities Innovation Center. Additionally, both companies will be present at the Ericsson booth #3153 at DISTRIBUTECH International from February 27-29 in Orlando, Fla., showcasing their Zero Trust Security and Autonomous Operations in a live private cellular environment.


Recent Content

OneLayer is expanding into Latin America to address growing demand for private 5G and LTE security solutions. With successful deployments in mining and utilities, the company brings its expertise in Zero Trust, network orchestration, and cellular device visibility to regional markets like Brazil and Chile.
Lufthansa Industry Solutions and Ericsson are tackling logistics bottlenecks with private 5G. At the LAX warehouse, they replaced unreliable Wi-Fi with just two private 5G radios, reducing scanning delays by 97% and eliminating paper logs. With edge computing and AI-powered inspections, their scalable solution is setting a new standard for warehouse automation and logistics connectivity.
An unsolicited offer from Perplexity to acquire Googles Chrome raises immediate questions about antitrust remedies, AI distribution, and who controls the internets primary access point. Perplexity has proposed a $34.5 billion cash acquisition of Chrome and says backers are lined up to fund the deal despite the startups significantly smaller balance sheet and an estimated $18 billion valuation in recent fundraising. The bid includes commitments to keep Chromium open source, invest an additional $3 billion in the codebase, and preserve current user defaults including leaving Google as the default search engine. The timing aligns with a U.S. Department of Justice push for structural remedies after a court found Google maintained an illegal search monopoly, with a Chrome divestiture floated as a central remedy.
South Korea’s government and its three national carriers are aligning fresh capital to speed AI and semiconductor competitiveness and to anchor a private-led innovation flywheel. SK Telecom, KT, and LG Uplus will seed a new pool exceeding 300 billion won (about $219 million) via the Korea IT Fund (KIF) to back core and foundational AI, AI transformation (AX), and commercialization in ICT. KIF, formed in 2002 by the carriers, will receive 150 billion won in new commitments, matched by at least an equal amount from external fund managers. The platforms lifespan has been extended to 2040 to sustain long-cycle bets.
A new joint solution from Rohde & Schwarz (R&S) and the Taiwan Space Agency (TASA) consolidates electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and antenna measurements into a single, production-grade test chamber, signaling a shift in how satellite payloads will be validated for Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) and mission-critical services. By integrating both disciplines in one chamber, TASA can validate RF performance, emissions, and immunity under consistent test conditions and configurations, improving time-to-launch and de-risking interoperability with terrestrial networks. The TASA deployment combines R&S hardware, software, and engineering with a locally built Compact Antenna Test Range (CATR) reflector to achieve dual-mode EMC and antenna measurements in one chamber.
NTT DATA and Google Cloud expanded their global partnership to speed the adoption of agentic AI and cloud-native modernization across regulated and dataintensive industries. The push emphasizes sovereign cloud options using Google Distributed Cloud, with both airgapped and connected deployments to meet data residency and regulatory needs without stalling innovation. The partners plan to build industry-specific agentic AI solutions on Google Agent space and Gemini models, underpinned by secure data clean rooms and modernized data platforms. NTT DATA is standing up a dedicated Google Cloud Business Group with thousands of engineers and aims to certify 5,000 practitioners to accelerate delivery, migrations, and managed services.
Whitepaper
Explore RADCOM's whitepaper 'Unleashing the Power of 5G Analytics' to understand how telecom operators can drive cost savings and revenue with 5G. Learn about NWDAF's role in network efficiency, innovative use cases, and analytics monetization strategies. Download now for key insights into optimizing 5G network performance....
Radcom Logo

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Private Network Awards 2025 - TeckNexus
Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025