Cybersecurity company Cybersixgill has announced a new system aimed at countering threats to vendors through the supply chain.
Tel Aviv-based Cybersixgill explores the darkest corners of the internet to uncover and combat the AI dangers posed by such threat actors.
Its third-party intelligence module aims to provide personalized support to enterprise security teams, enabling continuous monitoring and risk detection, and preventing attacks before they actually occur.
The company says research shows there were 245,000 software supply chain attacks in 2023 alone.
This costs organizations more than $45 billion. And that amount is expected to grow to $60 billion next year.
“Security teams can take every precaution to protect an organization's environment. However, there is a lack of intelligence about the risks third-party supply chains face and the impact on security posture. The consequences can be extremely damaging to a company’s brand and revenue,” said Gabi Reisch, CPO, CyberSixgil.
“As the cost of supply chain attacks rises, our new third-party intelligence module provides critical insights to security operations and threat analysts to protect organizations and their supplier and partner networks.” states.
“Cybersixgill's new third-party intelligence is a significant advancement that provides security teams and CISOs with actionable threat intelligence insights to help strengthen and protect their organizations' risk posture,” says Enterprise Research. said Chris Steffen, vice president of security and risk management. Management Associates (EMA).
“Threat intelligence that shines a broad and bright light on threats from within a company's third-party networks is a distinctly missing piece in an organization's cybersecurity program. Their efforts to bring this much-needed solution to market I praise you.”