Remove 2015 Remove IoT Remove Security Remove Technology
article thumbnail

Industrial cybersecurity startup Claroty raises $140M in pre-IPO funding round

TechCrunch

Claroty, an industrial cybersecurity company that helps customers protect and manage their Internet of Things (IoT) and operational technology (OT) assets, has raised $140 million in its latest, and potentially last round of funding. . Founded in 2015, the late-stage startup focuses on the industrial side of cybersecurity.

Industry 250
article thumbnail

How hackers are approaching medical cybersecurity

The Parallax

READ MORE ON MEDICAL CYBERSECURITY. Triaging modern medicine’s cybersecurity issues How to recover from a health care data breach To prevent EHR breaches, stop using them (Q&A) Ransomware attacks against hospitals: A timeline How weak IoT gadgets can sicken a hospital’s network Opinion: Who foots the bill for medical IoT security?

IoT 189
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Fed Tech News Roundup 8 July 2015

CTOvision

Pentagon's Silicon Valley unit gets $1.75M for fiscal 2015 - FCW.com FCW (Today) - FCW.comPentagon's Silicon Valley unit gets $1.75M for fiscal 2015FCW.comThe Defense Department's first fulltime outreach office in Silicon Valley is up and running thanks to a July 2 memo from Deputy. Securities and. Some are already. LATEST NEWS.

article thumbnail

You can see fires, but now Qwake wants firefighters to see through them

TechCrunch

When it comes to tough environments to build new technology, firefighting has to be among the most difficult. From a technology perspective, not all that much has really changed today when it comes to how people respond to blazes. The company, which was founded in 2015, just raised about $5.5 It secured a $1.4

Hardware 264
article thumbnail

Ransomware Exponentially Increasing as IoT Provides Physical Targeting Opportunities

CTOvision

Ransomware is increasingly targeting multiple industries with downtime and lost productivity as its attack surface expands beyond the virtual realm to the physical via the Internet of Things (IoT), however, organizations can posture against this threat with a comprehensive approach to risk management. million in 2015 to 638 million in 2016.

IoT 84
article thumbnail

Reasons why every IoT development company is using.NET?

Xicom

We have been speculating that more and more Internet of Things companies are coming on the scene and the best thing is that they are using.NET as the foundational framework of the most of the IoT mobile apps being created these days. We see that IoT has such a bright future and it is still taking baby steps into the competitive world of apps.

IoT 65
article thumbnail

Hackable software in the driver’s seat

The Parallax

Part of the problem, says Deirdre Mulligan , co-director of the University of California at Berkeley Center for Law and Technology and professor at UC Berkeley School of Information, is that the software running in cars—especially self-driving vehicles—is easy to manipulate. “There’s a ton we could do to make cars more secure.

Software 190