Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: February 15, 2024
California-based cybersecurity company Armis has purchased Cyber Threat Cognitive Intelligence as part of efforts to expand its platform’s capability to provide early warning cyber intelligence for government organizations and enterprises.
Armis said Wednesday it expects the merger to occur in the next 30 days and will integrate CTCI’s artificial intelligence-enabled pre-attack threat hunting technology with its Armis Centrix cyber exposure management platform to provide visualization capabilities and actionable intelligence to alert agencies and other organizations of a potential cyberattack or breach.
“It is time for the security community to redefine our operating paradigm by proactively finding and stopping attacks rather than taking action once the attack is launched,” said Yevgeny Dibrov, CEO and co-founder of Armis.
Dibrov noted that the transaction reflects the company’s commitment to helping organizations manage the attack surface through its Armis Centrix for Actionable Threat Intelligence.
CTCI CEO Andrew Grealy and Chief Threat Officer Michael Freeman established the company in 2020.
Join the Potomac Officers Club’s 2024 Cyber Summit on June 6 and hear cyber experts, government and industry leaders discuss the latest trends and the dynamic role of cyber in the public sector. Register here.
The General Services Administration has unveiled the first phase of awards under the Alliant 3 governmentwide acquisition contract, a multiple-award vehicle…
The Department of State has awarded spots on a multiple-award indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with a combined potential value of $10 billion…
Brian Hobbs has been appointed CEO of Clarity Innovations, effective March 2, the company announced Tuesday. He succeeds founder and long-serving CEO Wes…