INTZ March 24, 2026

Intrusion Inc. Q4 2025 Earnings Call - Government contract timing cost a quarter, revenue expected to land in H1 2026

Summary

Intrusion Inc. reported a year of product progress and partnerships, but a timing hit to a critical Department of War contract left Q4 revenue materially softer. Full year 2025 revenue rose 23% to $7.1 million, yet Q4 fell to $1.5 million, down 25% sequentially and 12% year-over-year, because incremental contract funding was delayed by U.S. procurement constraints amid a government shutdown and geopolitical disruptions.
Management has already booked the operating costs for that critical infrastructure deployment, meaning when the contract is funded the revenue should largely fall to the bottom line, and the company expects to recognize much of the delayed revenue in the first half of 2026. Meanwhile Intrusion expanded go-to-market reach with Shield Cloud on AWS and Azure, launched Shield Stratus, scaled a high-adoption POSSE program via PortNexus targeting schools and sheriffs, and is ramping sales and channel hires while planning a small debt raise to support growth.

Key Takeaways

  • Q4 2025 revenue $1.5 million, down 25% sequentially and down 12% year-over-year, primarily due to delayed incremental funding on a major U.S. Department of War contract.
  • Full year 2025 revenue $7.1 million, up 23% year-over-year, driven largely by expansion of the Department of War engagement.
  • Management says expenses for the critical infrastructure deployment have already been recognized, but corresponding revenue was delayed, which will boost future quarters when funded.
  • Company expects a substantial portion of the delayed government contract revenue to be recognized in the first half of 2026, management called the FY impact timing related to the U.S. government shutdown and related geopolitical events.
  • Q4 gross profit margin 74%, full year gross margin 76%, down about 93 basis points versus 2024, indicating slight margin compression.
  • Operating expenses rose, Q4 OpEx $4.0 million, full year OpEx $14.5 million, driven by higher sales and marketing, increased share-based comp, and investments in critical infrastructure ops.
  • Net loss Q4 was $2.8 million, or $0.14 per share; full year net loss $9.1 million, or $0.46 per share, a $1.3 million increase year-over-year.
  • Cash and cash equivalents were $3.6 million at December 31, 2025, and the company plans to pursue a small debt financing in the near term to support growth initiatives.
  • Product and distribution progress: Shield Cloud listed on AWS Marketplace and Azure, Shield Stratus launched as a cloud-native packet filter integrating with AWS Gateway Load Balancer.
  • Partnerships and channel: expanded PortNexus relationship, Shield Endpoint embedded in MyFlare school safety solution; POSSE program piloted with high adoption across Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Iowa.
  • POSSE economics: device pricing ranges from a few thousand dollars to tens of thousands depending on sheriff bandwidth needs; Pilots used lower-end appliances, quick POC model (loan unit 7-10 days) that produces fast decisions.
  • Revenue from PortNexus integrations is high-margin for Intrusion because the company licenses software while PortNexus handles installs and first-line support.
  • Sales and GTM: hired Valencia Reaves as Public Sector VP of Sales and Patrick Duggan as Director of Channel Sales, doubling down on public sector and channel motion; S&M spend will increase above current run rate.
  • Management reiterated ambition to reach break-even operations, with a target tone of achieving break-even by Q3 2026 absent further government funding disruptions, and CEO expressed disappointment at the delay.
  • Market positioning: management argues AI and cloud code security will increase attack volume and sophistication, which should expand demand for continuous, packet-level network protection and attract MSSPs.
  • Risks highlighted: dependence on government procurement timing and funding, modest cash balance requiring financing, increased OpEx to scale sales, and execution risk converting pilots into broad commercial and government deals.

Full Transcript

Operator: Welcome to Intrusion Inc.’s fourth quarter and full year 2025 earnings conference call and webcast. At this time, all participant lines are in a listen-only mode. For those of you participating in the conference call, there will be an opportunity for your questions at the end of today’s prepared comments. Please note this conference call is being recorded. An audio replay of the conference call will be available on the company’s website within a few hours after this call. I would now like to turn the call over to Josh Carroll with Investor Relations.

Josh Carroll, Investor Relations, Intrusion Inc.: Thank you, and welcome. Joining me today are Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, and Kimberly Pinson, Chief Financial Officer. This call is being webcast and will be archived on the investor relations section of our website. Before I turn the call over to Tony, I’d like to remind everyone that the statements made during this conference call relating to the company’s expected future performance, future business prospects, future events, or plans may include forward-looking statements as defined under the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Please refer to our SEC filings for more information on the specific risk factors that could cause our actual results to differ materially from the projections described in today’s conference call.

Any forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based upon information that we believe as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. In addition to U.S. GAAP reporting, we report certain financial measures that do not conform to generally accepted accounting principles. During the call, we may use non-GAAP measures if we believe it is useful to investors or if we believe it will help investors better understand our performance or business trends. With that, let me now turn the call over to Tony for a few opening remarks.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, thank you, Josh, and good afternoon, and thank you all for joining us today. You know, fiscal year 2025 was a year that had an unexpected beginning and an unexpected ending, along with a number of significant product milestones along the way. At the beginning of the year, we improved our balance sheet by fully eliminating our then outstanding debt in Series A preferred stock. At mid-year, we rolled out production of our critical infrastructure solution to help safeguard essential assets like water, power, and telecom facilities. In the third and fourth quarter, we expanded our access to our Shield Cloud solution by making two variations of the product available on the AWS Marketplace. Towards the end of the year, we announced our partnership with PortNexus to provide secure network protection for their MyFlare Alert safety technology, which is being deployed at schools in several states.

In conjunction with PortNexus, we also launched the POSSE program, which will give sheriffs and other law enforcement agencies critical network protection for their public safety networks. Our pilot experience with the POSSE program is encouraging, with a high adoption rate so far. Finally, we ended the year with an unexpected delay in the extension of the earlier-mentioned critical infrastructure contract with the U.S. Department of War. I’ll start my detailed remarks with some more insight about this unexpected end-of-year development. Kim will provide more details on the overall numbers shortly, but our fourth quarter revenues decreased by 12% compared to the prior year period as a result of the delayed timing of an expected contract extension for our critical infrastructure technology. But for this delay, we had expected to show quarter-on-quarter increases in revenue and greater year-over-year increase in revenue overall.

Now, to be clear, the cost to providing the services for this critical infrastructure solution are included in our operating expenses, but the expected revenue is not, and will show up in later periods when the contract is extended. The timing of this contract extension was and remains affected by the operational administrative constraints associated with the U.S. government shutdown, which limited agencies’ ability to initiate and process contract actions during that period. The situation is further impacted by the events related to the war in Iran unfolding currently. This delay in funding reflects a broader trend affecting companies with U.S. government contracts, particularly those operating within the defense sector. While we’re disappointed by this delay, we do believe that we will be able to recognize this revenue during the first half of 2026 once procurement activity normalizes.

We are continuing to support and enhance the solution that we have provided, and we look for further expansion of this solution in other regions in 2026. We’re proud of our partnership with the U.S. Department of War and the critical role we play in protecting national security through our advanced cyber capabilities. We continue to view the critical infrastructure solution that we have rolled out with the Department of War as one of the key drivers of future growth, especially as cyber threats become more frequent and more sophisticated. To convert this opportunity into future growth, we’ve recently taken targeted steps to enhance our sales efforts and go-to-market strategy, and I’ll discuss these initiatives in more detail shortly. They are specifically designed to expand our customer base across the private sector, as well as federal, state, and local government markets. Turning now to some fourth quarter developments.

During the quarter, we announced the launch of our Shield Cloud offering on the AWS Marketplace, expanding the opportunity for customers to access our Shield technology. Additionally, we’ve launched our Shield Cloud offering on Microsoft’s Azure platform, and it’s now live. With availability across both leading cloud marketplaces, we’ve meaningfully expanded our sales reach, which will help enhance our customer pipeline and drive future revenue growth. On top of this customer access expansion effort, we’ve also continued to strategically invest in R&D to help provide enhanced offerings to our customers. This is evident by the recent launch of Shield Stratus, a cloud-native packet filtering solution that inspects every connection and blocks known threats immediately without the complexity or re-architecture required by traditional firewalls. Shield Stratus integrates seamlessly with AWS Gateway Load Balancer and is a great addition to our Shield ecosystem.

Now on to some of the more recent developments during the first few months of 2026. As you may recall, we began a partnership with PortNexus in 2025, and who chose to embed our Shield Endpoint solution into their MyFlare solution that helps provide enhanced security for education and law enforcement customer endpoints. In February, we expanded our partnership with PortNexus by launching the POSSE program that utilizes our Shield on-premise technology to help protect law enforcement from cyber threats. The program achieved high levels of adoption during the initial pilot, and in the pilot program, Intrusion Shield technology identified and stopped dozens of active threats. The program is now scaling across Texas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Iowa through our partnership with PortNexus. This partnership provides distribution access to hundreds of sheriff’s departments, schools, and government facilities.

It’s an exciting development, and we look forward to working closely with PortNexus to help expand this program and increase the adoption of our technology. We also recently took steps to expand our business development efforts with the hiring of Valencia Reaves as our Public Sector Vice President of Sales, and Patrick Duggan as our Director of Channel Sales and Partnerships. These two additions to our team will help strengthen our U.S. business development efforts across the government sector and our channel partners. Now, briefly on to our financials for the quarter and the year. Total revenues for 2025 were $7.1 million, up 23% year-over-year. This top line growth was largely driven by the contract expansion with the U.S. Department of War that I touched on earlier.

Fourth quarter revenue was $1.5 million, a decrease of 25% sequentially, which was the result of the delay in the incremental funding of the Department of War contract that I previously referred to. Our operating expenses also saw a slight increase during both the quarter and the year. This increase in our expense reflects deliberate strategic investments to strengthen our business and position us to achieve our goal of creating sustainable growth and long-term profitability, as well as the costs associated with the critical infrastructure deployment and operation I mentioned before. We’ve made meaningful progress against our goals, and we believe we’re on track to break even operations. Finally, before I turn the call over to Kim, I’d like to wrap up by addressing some of the recent AI trends that we’re seeing in the cybersecurity space.

As I’m sure many of you are aware, the recent emergence of Cloud Code Security has caused a bit of a shakeup in the cybersecurity space, as some fear this tool will change the industry by eliminating defects in software. However, I do not view this development as a threat to cybersecurity companies such as Intrusion, but more as a promising tailwind for the industry. While improved code quality is more than welcome, it’s only one aspect of the landscape of cybersecurity vulnerabilities. In fact, the rapid adoption of AI has materially increased cybersecurity risk as it has significantly reduced the cost, the technical expertise, and the time required to develop and execute highly sophisticated and scalable attacks.

As a result, this is only going to increase the need for cybersecurity solutions, such as the ones that we provide to our customers, that help catch these malicious actors before they can cause harm. Now, with that, I’d like to turn the call over to Kim for a more detailed review of our fourth quarter and full-year financial results. Kim?

Kimberly Pinson, Chief Financial Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Thanks, Tony, and good afternoon, everyone. Fourth quarter results totaled $1.5 million in revenue, a decrease of 25% compared to the prior quarter and 12% when compared to the prior year period, as noted earlier on the call. This was due to the delayed incremental funding of a major U.S. government contract. The timing of this award was affected by funding and procurement constraints associated with the U.S. government shutdown and continuing resolution, which affected agencies’ ability to approve and initiate new contract actions during the period. We believe the delay in this contract award is primarily timing related and anticipate that a substantial portion of the delayed revenue associated with this contract will be recognized in future periods.

Consulting revenues totaled $1.1 million in the fourth quarter, compared to $1.5 million in the prior quarter and $1.3 million in the prior year quarter. Shield revenues totaled $0.4 million in the fourth quarter, compared to $0.5 million in the prior quarter and $0.3 million in the fourth quarter of 2024. We anticipate that the sale of our OT Defender solution in other departments of the U.S. government, as well as commercially, will contribute to future growth. Additionally, during 2025, we partnered with PortNexus to integrate our Shield technology into its MyFlare Alert school safety solution. Although sales to PortNexus did not materially impact 2025 revenues, the expanded pipeline for this offering is expected to support future Shield revenue growth.

Fourth quarter gross profit margin was 74%, which was slightly down from the prior year period. For the full year, gross profit margin was 76%, down approximately 93 basis points versus 2024. Operating expenses in the fourth quarter of 2025 totaled $4 million, an increase of $0.3 million sequentially and $0.8 million year-over-year. The fourth quarter increase, both sequentially and compared to prior year, was primarily driven by higher sales and marketing expenses, reflecting increased participation in trade shows and expanded brand awareness and product marketing programs. For the full year, operating expenses totaled $14.5 million, an increase of $1.7 million compared to 2024.

In addition to the increased sales and marketing expense, the full year increase primarily related to one-time savings realized in 2024 from the negotiation or cancellation of existing contracts, which contributed $0.5 million in savings in 2024. Increased share-based compensation of $0.8 million from equity grants made in the first quarter of 2025 and cost of living and merit increases of $0.3 million. Net loss for the fourth quarter of 2025 was $2.8 million, or $0.14 per share, compared to the net loss of $2 million for the fourth quarter of 2024. The increased fourth quarter net loss is the result of the reduction in revenues resulting from the delay in the incremental funding of government contract and increased operating expense.

Net loss for the full year was $9.1 million or $0.46 per share, a $1.3 million increase from the prior year. Turning to the balance sheet from a liquidity perspective, on December 31, 2025, we had cash and cash equivalents of $3.6 million. Looking ahead, we plan to seek a small debt financing in the near term to help further support our growth initiatives. We have already begun to have some initial discussions and will provide an additional update on the debt financing during our first quarter earnings call. With that, I’d like to turn the call back over to Tony for a few closing comments. Tony?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Thank you, Kim. 2025 was a year of meaningful progress for Intrusion from a product development standpoint and was marked by several key improvements, including new products. While this progress was encouraging, we’re not satisfied, and we realize that we have some significant work ahead of us. As we look to the remainder of 2026, we will be doubling down on our sales efforts to expand our customer base and to further improve our top-line growth. We’re confident we have both the right people and the products in place that will help us achieve our goal of creating sustainable growth and long-term profitability. Before I wrap up, I want to extend my gratitude to our employees. The progress we’ve made this past year is a direct reflection of their dedication and hard work.

To our shareholders, we deeply appreciate your patience and steadfast support throughout this journey. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to the operator for Q&A.

Operator: Certainly. Everyone at this time will be conducting a question and answer session. If you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone at this time. We do ask that while posing your question, please pick up your handset if you’re listening on speakerphone to provide optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone. Please hold while we poll for questions. Your first question is coming from Scott Buck from H.C. Wainwright. Your line is live.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Hi. Good afternoon, guys. Thanks for the time. Tony, I’m curious, can you provide a little more granularity on the unit economics of the POSSE program? You know, like what is the average contract value for a typical sheriff’s department deployment, and what do the sales cycles look like with your partnership with PortNexus?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Sure. Well, the device that they select will depend a lot on the network bandwidth that they need at the sheriff’s department. Those could range from a few thousand dollars up to, you know, tens of thousands of dollars depending on the size and bandwidth requirements of the particular sheriff. In the case of the pilots, we use some of our lower-end appliances, so it’s a few thousand dollars in terms of the units pricing on those.

What I’m encouraged by is as we’ve experienced everywhere else, you know, once we show the network traffic that’s getting through the traditional firewalls and other technologies they have in place, and also show the outbound traffic that should be blocked that’s not currently being blocked, it makes the sale pretty quickly. We’re seeing a high adoption rate, and we’re gonna expand into these other states as I mentioned on the call. The way it works is we loan them a unit, it goes in for a week to 10 days, we do a report and show them the traffic that we see and would have blocked if we’d been in place, and they love it. We’re doubling down on that.

We’re increasing the number of POC units and we’ll see where it takes us. That’s kind of the way it works.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: That’s very helpful. Then I wanted to clarify something in your prepared remarks. Did you say that had you not had the delay from the government contract during the quarter, that we would have seen sequential revenue growth from the third quarter?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yes. That is correct.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Okay. Perfect.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: That is correct.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Um, and then-

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah, we were expecting to report, you know, growth both for the quarter and quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year above and beyond what we reported on the year-over-year.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Okay. Safe to assume that contract delay cost you at least half a million dollars in the quarter?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yes.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Perfect. Kim, I wanted to ask about sales and marketing expense. I think it’s the highest quarterly level of spend maybe ever. Is this the new run rate? Or given some of the comments during the call, can we expect, you know, further investment in sales in 2026?

Kimberly Pinson, Chief Financial Officer, Intrusion Inc.: We will continue to invest in sales and marketing. What we saw in the first quarter approximates the run rate, but we will see some increases from here.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Okay. Perfect. That’s all I had, guys. I appreciate it.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Scott, I’d also add we’re looking for cost efficiencies elsewhere, so it’s important for us now to improve that sales and marketing muscle and we’ll look for other efficiencies elsewhere, as we buttress up that capability.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Okay. We may not see as material an increase in total operating expense because some of those dollars will

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Will be offset by.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: Because they come from other buckets.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yes. Exactly.

Scott Buck, Analyst, H.C. Wainwright: I appreciate it, guys. Thank you very much.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question is coming from Ed Wu from Ascendiant Capital. Your line is live.

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: Yeah. Thank you for taking my question. Did I hear you right that you said for the, you know, delayed contract that some of your expenses has already flown through the PNL already?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: That, that’s correct. Yeah. We’ve taken all the expense associated with that. We just are not able to recognize the revenue at this point.

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: Okay. On a different topic.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: What that translates to. I’m sorry?

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: All right.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah. What that means is

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: Understood.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: When the revenue does come, it’ll show up in a subsequent quarter, but the expense will already have been recognized.

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: Okay. That will be 100% margin when it comes through?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Pretty nearly, yes.

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: Okay. What about the sales cycle pipeline for commercial customers? Have you seen any delays, any lengthening of sales cycle? Any concerns that you’re hearing from, you know, chief, you know, information officers out there?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Beyond the government sector, no real change. I think the one concern that we hear all the time is that the dwell time for threats is getting shorter and shorter and shorter, which means you have to react faster than ever, you know, once some suspicious activity is noted. I think that bodes well for Intrusion’s technology because we don’t rely on the presence of malware or other known signatures. We’re heavily focused on reputation, which means that we can stop things in real time versus, you know, waiting for something bad to happen, and then have to react to it, and then remediate, and so on.

We’re currently having some discussions with MSSPs and so on, who are attracted to that kind of capability ’cause it helps get out in front of these attacks versus waiting for an attack to actually happen.

Ed Wu, Analyst, Ascendiant Capital: That sounds good. Well, thanks for answering my question, and I wish you good luck. Thank you.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question is coming from Howard Brous from Wellington Shield. Your line is live.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Thank you. A couple of questions. Tony, critical infrastructure customer that you have, can you give us a general sense of what kind of customer it is? Is he happy with the work? Is this basically expandable for that particular customer?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah. You know, this solution is protecting critical water infrastructure in the Asia PAC region, and the customer’s very happy with the solution. It’s working as designed, and we continue to support it. I think there’s tremendous opportunities for this to expand beyond the region where it is now. We’re doing one island right now in Asia PAC, but as you know, there’s a lot of islands that the Department of War has interest in that particular region. I think the revenue opportunity that comes from this is, you know, multiplied by the number of islands that still need this kind of protection. That’s not to mention the domestic facilities as well, which fall under Homeland Security jurisdiction generally.

With our new sales capability that I mentioned on the call, we’re targeting those places as well. We’ve got great customer reference, you know, from this initial deployment, so we’re pretty excited about the revenue opportunity in 2026 and going forward. There’s a lot of this critical infrastructure around, whether it’s water or telecom or electrical grid kinds of things, and our solution is tailorable to each of those environments.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Let me digress for a moment and talk about schools and children.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Mm-hmm.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: You install this in a school, and it’s my understanding it’s in every classroom, and can be activated by a teacher if there’s a potential event happening where somebody’s coming into the school with a weapon. Is that a fair comment?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Correct. Yeah. That’s the PortNexus solution that we’re partners with. Yes.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Right. You’ve got thousands of school districts throughout the country. Why isn’t everyone adopting this? It protects our children. There’s nothing more important than that.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: All right. Yeah.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: How are you going about marketing this?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, with PortNexus, we’re attending events where school administrators, you know, look for technology. We’re also marketing, as we mentioned, to the sheriff’s department because or whoever the local law enforcement agency is that’s associated with a particular school district, ’cause it takes the combination of them to really adopt the solution. The good news is it’s very inexpensive. I’ve mentioned to a couple people it’s the kind of thing that, in many cases, the local PTA could fund, even if the school couldn’t afford to do it. But you’re right. I think once you see the demo of this capability and the situational awareness that it brings to the law enforcement people within seconds of an event occurring, it, you know, it’s a why wouldn’t we wanna have this kind of thing.

We’re really looking forward to 2026 to expand this greatly across lots of markets in the U.S.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Your reception so far has been?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: It’s been outstanding, yeah. Again, you know, once you see it, you go, "Duh, you know, why would I ever wanna be without this kind of thing?" You know, parenthetically, I’ll say it could apply to other public venues as well. It doesn’t necessarily only get marketed to schools, but any place where people gather and there’s a potential for you know, disruptions, you know, whether it’s you know, active shooters or you know, fire or any other kind of an event that might be disruptive, it’s really important for law enforcement to get situational awareness as quickly as possible, and this PortNexus solution allows for multiple perspectives to get that situational awareness, as well as alerting the authorities very quickly when an event happens.

It shaves minutes off of that critical first few minutes when you have a potential to avert disaster. I don’t know anybody who’s ever seen it that doesn’t think that’s a good idea.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Anything to protect our children is a very good idea. Can you talk about?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: You got it.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: No doubt about that. Talk about the kind of cost. Is it per student? Per classroom? Per school?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: It’s per classroom. The PortNexus solution would go into the classroom in the case of a school, and attach to or become part of the smart whiteboard that’s in the classroom.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Mm-hmm.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: School resource officers and teachers and anybody else that should be registered gets registered to that location. In the event of an incident, the panic button gets pushed, a text goes to all the preregistered cell phones. It turns the cell phone into a lights up the camera and the microphone, and the GPS signal, and all of that gets fed to the law enforcement authorities, along with video from the fixed cameras that usually are already installed in the school. When an event happens, the law enforcement authorities have great situational awareness, and location information from multiple perspectives. It’s invaluable. We license to PortNexus the network protection aspect of it.

The revenue we get comes from, you know, the number of classrooms and then the number of schools within the school district.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: The margins on this are high margins?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, for us, it’s very high, yes. ’Cause we don’t actually have to go do any install or anything. We just license our software. PortNexus team is responsible for the installs and first level support and so on. It’s almost pure profit for us.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: This is a big deal. Anything to protect our children, that’s a good thing.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: You got it.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Tony, thank you. Good luck.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: You’re welcome.

Howard Brous, Analyst, Wellington Shield: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from James Green. Your line is live.

James Green, Analyst: Hi, Tony. My question concerns the potential emerging technologies and the ability for your technology to interface with those things. I’m specifically thinking about, you know, as we move forward into a day and an era where we have humanoid robots and we have autonomous cars, we have an imminent threat where if they’re compromised, they can be, you know, an immediate danger. If someone compromises a-

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Hello? I think we may have lost you, or I couldn’t hear the rest of your question. Hello? Can anyone hear me?

Operator: Apologies. James Green’s line has disconnected.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Oh, okay. Well, I think the question was. I’ll try to answer as best I can. Yes, there’s more and more software, more and more autonomous things, whether it’s robots or everything in your house, you know, the emergence of AI in everything, I think widens the aperture for cybersecurity risk significantly. Our fundamental belief is that if you’re not monitoring the network that all of these things need to operate on, if you’re not monitoring it in real time, packet by packet in multiple places in your network, you’re likely to miss important things that would allow you to avert a disaster. That’s what Intrusion Shield does.

We look at every packet in near real time, and we make a decision about whether that packet is likely good or likely bad, or unknown in some cases, and we make a decision. I have used the analogy, it’s like having continuous blood monitoring in your body. Most people get their blood drawn, you know, once a year when they go to a physical exam, but some bad condition might have existed for, you know, almost a year, and you wouldn’t know it until you get your blood drawn and get it tested. In our case, we’re doing the equivalent of looking at every single drop of blood in the body all the time, every time it moves through the body, and that allows us to very quickly detect when there’s something untoward going on.

I think that type of protection is what’s gonna be more and more important, as things move forward, specifically with AI and more and more software in our lives. The threat landscape just got a whole lot bigger and needs to be monitored and managed.

Operator: James Green, your line is connected and live.

James Green, Analyst: Hi, Tony. Sorry, I accidentally got the line disconnected, so I missed the beginning of what you said. Since I missed the beginning, my question was based off those, you know, emerging technologies, et cetera, is the current form factor or technology that you all utilize, is it easily interfaced with those potential technologies? Or, you know, is there some minor alteration necessary to be able to utilize them in that?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah, the answer to that is we can attach to the network in any form that it occurs, whether it’s wired or wireless or in the cloud or in a data center or in a home, for that matter. The important thing, as I was saying in my earlier answer, is to be really safe. You need to be monitoring the network, each and every packet, all the time, and monitoring from multiple places in your network to be assured that everything that is going on in the network is desirable and necessary even in some cases. Yes, we’re very flexible in that regard, and we have put the R&D effort into making sure we can handle increasingly large bandwidth as that becomes a necessity.

I think we’re well prepared for the future in that regard.

James Green, Analyst: Okay. One other question, which is, since we have all these scenarios where people are gonna have local agentic things running on their own, you know, potentially private networks, walking back off a cloud, you know, the speculation that, you know, companies might be trying to have all their things working within their own system, is there a way in which the technology deals with the, you know, agentic element even internally?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah. I think to the degree that all of these agentic tools will use the network, that allows us to monitor what that activity is. I think you’re gonna see in 2026, I’ve made this prediction a number of times, you’re gonna see some pretty big accidents caused by unrestrained AI, where people let loose something that you know got out of control somehow. Whether it’s you know privacy violation or whether it’s a violation of releasing intellectual property in an unwarranted way. You know, who knows what it could be. I think it’s easily predictable that that’s gonna happen in 2026.

For us, the only safeguard against that kind of thing is continuous real-time network monitoring, so that, you know, the nanosecond something bad happens, that you can stop it and shut off its activities. You know, we think we’re in a good spot, as all of these things come to fruition.

James Green, Analyst: Like, within a local network, if there’s a agentic misbehavior, it can be controlled from being able to infect ones outside connected, potentially?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah. Yeah. One of the characteristics of malware already today, even without AI, is what’s known as a call home. An infected device inside the network makes a call home to a command and control server externally, and looks for instructions in some cases, or just reports its presence in the network where it finds itself resident, and then often waits for instruction on what to do next. You know, launch a phishing campaign or launch some sort of other kind of attack. Intrusion technology is particularly good at stopping those call homes that would otherwise be you know, very dangerous. Now, I’ll say what we don’t do is we don’t go fix the device that had the problem.

We just point you to it and say, "You know, this device over here has apparently got a problem. It’s generating call homes to undesirable place." Most managed service providers and managed service security providers and institutions already have the tools to do remediation. What they lack is the early detection of that activity, and that’s where Intrusion comes in.

James Green, Analyst: Okay. All right. That’s all I have questions about. Thank you.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Thank you.

Operator: Thank you. Once again, everyone, if you have any questions or comments, please press star then one on your phone. Your next question is coming from Jerry Uffner from Usio, Inc. Your line is live.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: Hey, Tony. Last quarter, you opened your comments by saying you’re pleased to report that during the third quarter, we continue our path towards achieving our goal of creating sustainable growth and long-term profitability. Today, you opened by saying you’re on the path to break even operations. My question is, in what quarter do you expect to have those break even operations?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, can you tell me when we’re gonna have another government shutdown or CR?

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: Assuming no government shutdown.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: No CR.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: What quarter would you expect to have break-even operations?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, it depends on new contracts that we sign. As I mentioned, we think this critical infrastructure solution’s got pretty big legs. Our first contract for that was a $3 million, roughly annual contract, and it wouldn’t take too many more of those to get us to that goal. It’s all dependent on timing in 2026 of when we would get those. We think we’re in good position to land, you know, more of those in 2026 than we did in 2025, and whether it’s two or three or whatever.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: Would you be extremely disappointed if you weren’t breakeven in the third quarter of this year?

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yes is the answer. I was disappointed that we weren’t break-even right now, to be honest with you. We thought we were on a path to get there more quickly than we have been. That’s life, and there’s probably some mistakes that we made that we, in retrospect, you know, would do differently. You know, I still think we’re on the right path, and I’m pretty optimistic that 2026 is our year.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: All right. By the third quarter, we should expect to see that as shareholders.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: I would hope so, yes. I’m a shareholder, so.

Jerry Uffner, Analyst, Usio, Inc.: You have skin in the game, so I appreciate it.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Yeah.

Operator: Thank you. At this time, there are no other questions in the queue. I’ll turn the call back over to our host, Mr. Tony Scott, for any closing remarks.

Tony Scott, President and Chief Executive Officer, Intrusion Inc.: Well, as I said before, I just wanna thank everybody for your interest in Intrusion. As I said at the beginning, it was a year that was unexpected in many respects. I look forward to the progress that we can make in 2026 with a little more stability and a little more predictability coming our way. We’ve made, I think, all the right investments in our tech. We’ve begun the strategic investments in our sales and marketing capability that, frankly, we’ve lacked over the last couple of years. If I had to look back, I probably was a little too slow in building up that muscle.

I’m very pleased with the team that we have now, and they’re showing remarkable ability to get us into places that and talk to people that we hadn’t been talking to over the last couple of years. That gives me hope. These are experienced, you know, sales and marketing people and it’s just a pleasure to work with them and see the progress every single day. I’m appreciative of everyone’s patience. I know it’s been a long, grueling road, but I remain optimistic and excited about what we can do together in 2026. I appreciate everybody’s time today, and I look forward to speaking with you at the next earnings call or maybe some announcements even before then. Thanks.

Operator: Thank you. Everyone, this concludes today’s event. You may disconnect at this time and have a wonderful day. Thank you for your participation.