Founder & CEO · Mykei Securities Ltd
Building the technology that removes the economic reward from theft —
one forensically marked device at a time.
Status
Building
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Years Old
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Degrees
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Patent Pending
Background
Michael Esema is a British entrepreneur, inventor, and the founder and CEO of Mykei Securities Ltd — a security technology company building physical anti-theft infrastructure for the modern world.
At 29, Michael holds three academic degrees and has spent years examining a problem that traditional security systems have failed to solve: theft remains profitable because stolen goods can be resold. His answer is not to make theft harder — but to make it economically irrational.
With a patent pending on the ADN-1 system, Michael is building Mykei Securities into a company that changes the fundamental economics of acquisitive crime — creating a world where stealing something leaves the thief with an asset worth nothing.
His background spans healthcare, technology, and business — giving him an unusually multidisciplinary lens through which to approach security problems long viewed in isolation.
Credentials
Core Technology
The ADN-1 is Mykei Securities' flagship device — a physical security node that embeds unique forensic identifiers into assets at the point of installation. Unlike GPS trackers or alarm systems, ADN-1 doesn't just respond to theft — it restructures the incentives before theft ever occurs.
Each node generates a cryptographically linked forensic signature that permanently associates an asset with its rightful owner. This signature survives physical removal attempts, cannot be overwritten, and is readable by law enforcement and certified partners at the point of recovery.
The result is a device that doesn't need to prevent theft — it makes theft pointless. A stolen asset bearing ADN-1 forensic markers becomes unsellable, unrefinanceable, and economically sterile.
View Mykei.io ↗Core Principle
Rather than preventing theft through physical barriers, Economic Sterilisation removes the financial reward from the act entirely. The market for stolen goods collapses at the asset level.
Contact
Whether you're an investor, a potential partner, a journalist, or someone who believes the economics of crime need to change — Michael wants to hear from you.
hello@michaelesema.com