David Anderman's Sovera is building a sovereign LEO broadband network

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Exclusive: David Anderman's Sovera is building a sovereign LEO broadband network - RuntimeWire

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Scoop: RuntimeWire original reporting.

Why it matters

Sovera is betting that the next LEO broadband fight will be about control. Governments want Starlink-class coverage without giving a foreign private operator the keys to national connectivity.

David Anderman is launching Sovera, a satellite communications startup building a low-Earth-orbit broadband constellation for governments and mobile network operators that want national control over space-based connectivity.

Sovera is also in talks to raise more than $20 million in seed financing, according to people familiar with the financing. The round has not been publicly announced, and RuntimeWire could not verify the lead investor or valuation from public records. If completed above that level, the financing would give Sovera early capital to hire and develop hardware for a full-stack satellite network before proving commercial service in orbit.

Anderman is the tell. His public Future in Review speaker profile lists him as CEO and founder of Sovera and as co-founder and general partner of Stellar Ventures. The same profile says he previously served as general counsel of SpaceX, where he helped roll out Starlink, and before that spent 16 years at Lucasfilm, rising from junior lawyer to general counsel and chief operating officer. A Surf Air Mobility announcement separately says Anderman was SpaceX general counsel from June 2019 to December 2020 and supported the rollout of Starlink and the first private astronaut launch to the International Space Station.

Sovera's pitch is a direct answer to a problem Starlink created by solving a different one. SpaceX proved that a vertically integrated LEO broadband network could be manufactured, launched, operated and sold at global scale. That success also concentrated a critical communications layer inside a U.S. private company, creating a sovereignty problem for countries that want the coverage and economics of LEO without depending on a foreign operator for spectrum strategy, service continuity, user terminals, data routing and wartime policy decisions.

Public hiring material connected to Anderman's stealth space company shows how Sovera intends to attack that gap. A Rippling job listing for Omnis Corporation, the stealth company named in Anderman's conference bio, says Omnis is developing technology to let citizens and countries maintain sovereign control over advanced communications. The same listing says the team is drawing on experience building LEO constellations and plans to design, procure or build, test and operate all parts of the system, including thousands of satellites, communications payloads, consumer receivers and software. Several job mirrors identify the employer as Sovera Corporation while preserving the Omnis program description, suggesting the company has been moving from stealth infrastructure buildout toward the Sovera brand.

The clearest public signal is a trademark. Sovera Corporation filed a U.S. trademark application on April 15th, 2026 for satellite communication services, wireless broadband communication services, internet access, multimedia transmission and electronic message transmission. Trademark filings do not prove launch readiness, but the scope matches a communications network rather than a component supplier.

Sovera's job postings are unusually specific for a company that has not publicly announced a product. A PCB designer listing mirrored by SonicJobs says Omnis is building a large LEO satellite constellation to provide fast, reliable internet to tens of millions of users worldwide while empowering local partners and ensuring sovereign autonomy and control within their territory. The same listing points to satellite payload phased-array antennas, gateways and customer-facing hardware. Other listings mention air interface design, MAC and PHY layers, waveform design, RF engineering, digital beamforming, ASIC and RFIC work, satellite power systems, network routing, GNC, integration and test, manufacturing, supply chain and market access.

That is the real distinction from most space startups. Sovera is not presenting itself as a payload company, a terminal company or a hosted-service wrapper around an existing constellation. The public hiring language describes a vertically integrated network, closer in architecture ambition to Starlink than to a reseller or regional capacity aggregator. For governments and mobile carriers, that distinction matters because sovereignty is operational rather than rhetorical. Control over the service means...

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