“Over 90 percent of breaches start with a compromised endpoint, and CISOs have realised that there’s no point in trying to close the stable door once the horse has bolted,” said Simon Crosby, CTO of Bromium. “Detection is vital, but it isn’t enough. It can’t protect you, and it takes too long: The average time to detect a targeted breach now exceeds 200 days.”
With the introduction of executable analysis, Bromium offers the most comprehensive protection and detection endpoint feature set for enterprises against known and unknown threats that attack endpoints from the Web, email, USB, and collaboration and productivity applications. Micro-virtualization reduces the attack surface to prevent compromise, even by zero-day attacks and even on unpatched machines.
“Isolating threats with Bromium is so phenomenally effective that it has become foundational to my security architecture,” said Ken Pfeil, CISO at MFS Investment Management. “This is the second company where I have invested in Bromium because it deploys at scale rapidly, is transparent to the end user, and prevents endpoint breaches better than any technology I have seen.”
While advanced attacks target vulnerabilities in commonly-used software, executables boost the threat, offering an easy way to get malware into an enterprise by masquerading as a legitimate program. Traditional malware detection and whitelists don’t block these attacks; only isolation does, while reducing the risk of exposure and rate of high false positives.
“Version 3.0 of the Bromium suite incorporates feature requests from our enterprise and government customers, and lays a foundation for our continued growth in 2016,” said Ian Pratt, CEO of Bromium. “We have doubled bookings year-over-year and, in the same period, tripled our customer count in the Fortune 500 segment as more corporations deploy our solution at scale.”