

Image via Enigma Networks.
Enigma Networks, a cybersecurity software developer based in Exton, provides protection against AI-driven network threats.
Enigma Networks, a cybersecurity software developer based in Exton, provides protection against artificial intelligence-driven network threats, writes Joseph N. DiStefano for The Philadelphia Inquirer.
The startup is an 18-month “stealth project” from Bob Moul, a veteran of several Philadelphia-area software companies, and Mark Viglione, a former cybersecurity engineer at QVC and Vartex.
Enigma offers a “zero-trust for internal networks” software architecture. The tool both monitors activity and logs all movement and behavior patterns across a company’s systems.
The tool relies on sensors deployed throughout the entire network, rather than agents installed on individual devices.
“We are agent-less,” said Moul. “You drop our sensor into your network, it gets a mirrored copy of your network traffic” to identify and stop problem operators.
The platform also enables software users to track their own computing systems. This is a task that has proven surprisingly difficult for businesses with networks built over time from multiple vendors.
Enigma Networks “combines discovery, visibility, segmentation, and detection in a single, agent-less platform.” The platform deploys quickly, said David Wallace, chief technology officer of YPrime in Malvern, one of the software’s early users.
“It’s like flipping on the floodlights, so you can see everything that was hidden, see where traffic is flowing,” he added.
Read more about Enigma Networks in The Philadelphia Inquirer.
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