In today’s modern, ever-changing world, society has become increasingly dependent on digital technology. From ChatGPT, to smartphones, and self-scanning machines, digital technology encompasses our daily lives.
As technology continues to become entwined with our most basic human activities, the impact of cyberattacks has rapidly increased on hospitals, democratic elections, critical infrastructure, and government institutions. This is a clear demonstration of the destructive potential of unchecked cybercrime and state-backed surveillance.
Formed in 2021 and rebranded in 2022 from two of the great cybersecurity giants, McAfee and FireEye, global company Trellix is redefining the future of cybersecurity. For decades, Trellix has been trusted, employing some of the most talented cybersecurity leaders to protect over 40,000 customers all over the world.
Cybersecurity knows no geographical boundaries and crosses over in every sector, which is why Trellix is constantly looking to understand the cyber-readiness levels and challenges of global institutions and governments, to ensure it stays one step ahead of adversaries.
The company’s mission is to power a resilient, thriving world; a world where organisations and governments can focus on their strategic work and innovation, while Trellix provides cybersecurity that learns and adapts in real time to detect and respond to threats.
In order to deliver on this purpose, Trellix’s efforts are focused on solving the cybersecurity talent crisis, by building a diverse talent pipeline and creating one of the industry’s strongest threat intelligence research teams, to better inform and protect our digital lives. Soulful Work is a global, industrywide campaign, launched by Trellix to address the growing cybersecurity talent gap, while providing recommendations to build a larger, more diverse workforce.
Bryan Palma says, “We have to help train and attract the next generation of cyber experts because there is a 3.4 million global person shortage. It is difficult to recruit talent - there isn’t a pipeline and we need to address it through public and private initiatives now.”
Trellix’s Advanced Research Center is an elite team of hundreds of security analysts and researchers who find the latest vulnerabilities and cybercriminals. Working hard, Trellix’s more than 1000 engineers developed a platform known as XDR (Extended Detection and Response). This platform successfully brings together and correlates threat data, and uses artificial intelligence allowing security operations to defend their enterprises.
When it comes to cybersecurity, much of what goes on, goes undetected. The future of cybersecurity is automated detection, response, and remediation. No organisation can have 100% prevention due to the nature of cyberattacks. Trellix dedicates its technology to living security, that is as dynamic as the threat landscape, placing them as an industry leader.
What’s missing from the cybersecurity industry is an enterprise platform, which means businesses are currently working with siloed tools, resulting in a major lack of visibility and efficiency.
Trellix’s CEO, Bryan Palma, says, “We are seeing nation-states getting involved in cybersecurity, in what is called, the ‘grey-zone’. They are using it in military conflict. It spills into attacks on private corporations, which isn’t a fair fight. Bad actors are making significant amounts of money, and they’re using techniques like ransomware to make sure their businesses increase in profitability.”
In today’s modern, ever-changing world, society has become increasingly dependent on digital technology. From ChatGPT, to smartphones, and self-scanning machines, digital technology encompasses our daily lives.
As technology continues to become entwined with our most basic human activities, the impact of cyberattacks has rapidly increased on hospitals, democratic elections, critical infrastructure, and government institutions. This is a clear demonstration of the destructive potential of unchecked cybercrime and state-backed surveillance.
Formed in 2021 and rebranded in 2022 from two of the great cybersecurity giants, McAfee and FireEye, global company Trellix is redefining the future of cybersecurity. For decades, Trellix has been trusted, employing some of the most talented cybersecurity leaders to protect over 40,000 customers all over the world.
Cybersecurity knows no geographical boundaries and crosses over in every sector, which is why Trellix is constantly looking to understand the cyber-readiness levels and challenges of global institutions and governments, to ensure it stays one step ahead of adversaries.
The company’s mission is to power a resilient, thriving world; a world where organisations and governments can focus on their strategic work and innovation, while Trellix provides cybersecurity that learns and adapts in real time to detect and respond to threats.
In order to deliver on this purpose, Trellix’s efforts are focused on solving the cybersecurity talent crisis, by building a diverse talent pipeline and creating one of the industry’s strongest threat intelligence research teams, to better inform and protect our digital lives. Soulful Work is a global, industrywide campaign, launched by Trellix to address the growing cybersecurity talent gap, while providing recommendations to build a larger, more diverse workforce.
Bryan Palma says, “We have to help train and attract the next generation of cyber experts because there is a 3.4 million global person shortage. It is difficult to recruit talent - there isn’t a pipeline and we need to address it through public and private initiatives now.”
Trellix’s Advanced Research Center is an elite team of hundreds of security analysts and researchers who find the latest vulnerabilities and cybercriminals. Working hard, Trellix’s more than 1000 engineers developed a platform known as XDR (Extended Detection and Response). This platform successfully brings together and correlates threat data, and uses artificial intelligence allowing security operations to defend their enterprises.
When it comes to cybersecurity, much of what goes on, goes undetected. The future of cybersecurity is automated detection, response, and remediation. No organisation can have 100% prevention due to the nature of cyberattacks. Trellix dedicates its technology to living security, that is as dynamic as the threat landscape, placing them as an industry leader.
What’s missing from the cybersecurity industry is an enterprise platform, which means businesses are currently working with siloed tools, resulting in a major lack of visibility and efficiency.
Trellix’s CEO, Bryan Palma, says, “We are seeing nation-states getting involved in cybersecurity, in what is called, the ‘grey-zone’. They are using it in military conflict. It spills into attacks on private corporations, which isn’t a fair fight. Bad actors are making significant amounts of money, and they’re using techniques like ransomware to make sure their businesses increase in profitability.”
In today’s modern, ever-changing world, society has become increasingly dependent on digital technology. From ChatGPT, to smartphones, and self-scanning machines, digital technology encompasses our daily lives.
As technology continues to become entwined with our most basic human activities, the impact of cyberattacks has rapidly increased on hospitals, democratic elections, critical infrastructure, and government institutions. This is a clear demonstration of the destructive potential of unchecked cybercrime and state-backed surveillance.
Formed in 2021 and rebranded in 2022 from two of the great cybersecurity giants, McAfee and FireEye, global company Trellix is redefining the future of cybersecurity. For decades, Trellix has been trusted, employing some of the most talented cybersecurity leaders to protect over 40,000 customers all over the world.
Cybersecurity knows no geographical boundaries and crosses over in every sector, which is why Trellix is constantly looking to understand the cyber-readiness levels and challenges of global institutions and governments, to ensure it stays one step ahead of adversaries.
The company’s mission is to power a resilient, thriving world; a world where organisations and governments can focus on their strategic work and innovation, while Trellix provides cybersecurity that learns and adapts in real time to detect and respond to threats.
In order to deliver on this purpose, Trellix’s efforts are focused on solving the cybersecurity talent crisis, by building a diverse talent pipeline and creating one of the industry’s strongest threat intelligence research teams, to better inform and protect our digital lives. Soulful Work is a global, industrywide campaign, launched by Trellix to address the growing cybersecurity talent gap, while providing recommendations to build a larger, more diverse workforce.
Bryan Palma says, “We have to help train and attract the next generation of cyber experts because there is a 3.4 million global person shortage. It is difficult to recruit talent - there isn’t a pipeline and we need to address it through public and private initiatives now.”
Trellix’s Advanced Research Center is an elite team of hundreds of security analysts and researchers who find the latest vulnerabilities and cybercriminals. Working hard, Trellix’s more than 1000 engineers developed a platform known as XDR (Extended Detection and Response). This platform successfully brings together and correlates threat data, and uses artificial intelligence allowing security operations to defend their enterprises.
When it comes to cybersecurity, much of what goes on, goes undetected. The future of cybersecurity is automated detection, response, and remediation. No organisation can have 100% prevention due to the nature of cyberattacks. Trellix dedicates its technology to living security, that is as dynamic as the threat landscape, placing them as an industry leader.
What’s missing from the cybersecurity industry is an enterprise platform, which means businesses are currently working with siloed tools, resulting in a major lack of visibility and efficiency.
Trellix’s CEO, Bryan Palma, says, “We are seeing nation-states getting involved in cybersecurity, in what is called, the ‘grey-zone’. They are using it in military conflict. It spills into attacks on private corporations, which isn’t a fair fight. Bad actors are making significant amounts of money, and they’re using techniques like ransomware to make sure their businesses increase in profitability.”