Governance & Risk Management
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Operational Technology (OT)
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Video
CEO Yevgeny Dibrov Says Otorio Acquisition Positions Armis for Strong Growth
Buying Otorio expands Armis’s OT security offerings to cover on-premises deployments, secure remote access and attack path mapping, said co-founder and CEO Yevgeny Dibrov.
See Also: From Data to Decisions: Maximizing Operational Efficiency Through IT-OT Integration
OT environments are heavily targeted by nation-state actors yet tough to secure due to legacy systems, lack of visibility and operational priorities that often outweigh security, Dibrov said. Most OT devices cannot run agents or antivirus software, and many operate on outdated operating systems, but these devices are vital to production and operations, making downtime for patching or upgrades unfeasible (see: Armis Strengthens On-Prem OT Security With $120M Otorio Buy).
“Companies have no visibility, no understanding of what’s in that environment, no understanding of what does it mean to the environment from a risk standpoint and also how to really protect it because those devices, you can’t install anything on them,” Dibrov said. “Many of them are on super old operating systems. They’re not designed to be to have some form of protection.”
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Dibrov also discussed:
- The benefits of consolidating multiple vulnerability data sources;
- Why defensive artificial intelligence is important for proactive threat prevention;
- How Armis has integrated its code with Nvidia’s infrastructure.
Dibrov co-founded Armis in December 2015. He previously spent three years at cloud access security broker Adallom prior to its acquisition by Microsoft, during which time he led global business development. Prior to that, Dibrov spent 15 months as a firmware engineer at Mellanox Technologies and two years as a software engineer in the Israeli Intelligence Corps.

