Eyezee was designed by engineers who have built autonomous drones professionally — and who have also been the woman walking alone, keys between fingers, phone in hand, hoping nothing happens. We didn't read about this problem. We've lived it.
The personal safety market is full of products built by people who have studied the problem. Apps, alarms, wearables — tools designed by analyzing data about women's safety, then shipping something. We respect that work. But there's a difference between understanding a problem analytically and understanding it physically — the particular alertness of a parking garage, the calculation you run when footsteps get closer, the way you hold your phone differently after dark.
Eyezee was built from both kinds of knowledge. The technical depth to engineer autonomous positioning systems that work in GPS-degraded urban canyons. And the lived experience to know what those systems actually need to do.
We have designed products around the assumption that women must manage their own risk. The alarm is her responsibility. The app is her responsibility. Sharing her location is her responsibility. Eyezee is a different bet: that technology can carry some of that weight.

Bri has spent her career at the intersection of autonomous systems, aviation compliance, and standards development. She is an active ASTM F38 committee member and co-author of the P108 cybersecurity annex — the standard that will govern autonomous drone operations under FAA Part 108. She is also an engineer who has built drone systems from first principles, and a woman who has done the math on whether to take the shortcut home.
Bri co-mentors an all-girls aerial robotics team at St. Mary's Academy. The girls building drones in that program are the same girls who will eventually walk home alone at night. We think about that a lot.
Eyezee is not just a product. It is a proof of concept: that women with deep technical training can build the safety infrastructure that has been missing from their own lives. We want the girls in that robotics program to see that clearly.
We are not building a surveillance product. We are building a deterrence product — one that makes the people who would harm her reconsider, before anything happens. That distinction matters to us technically, legally, and as a matter of principle.
Reach us at hello@eyezeeuas.com. We read everything.