Security and Risk Complains Online Fraud: Elbit's Cyberbit Hones Military Technology for Commercial Market
RAANANA, Israel (Reuters)
- Israeli defense Electronics Company Elbit Systems forecasts double-digit
growth for its Cyberbit
business, which is transforming the technology it has long provided for
military intelligence to the fast-growing commercial market. Cyberbit took
shape after Elbit's $150 million acquisition of the cyber and intelligence unit
of Israel's Nice Systems in 2015, blending Nice's technology designed for law
enforcement and intelligence agencies with Elbit's military-focused
capabilities.
Today Cyberbit operates as
two companies - one focused on government security and intelligence and subject
to Israeli export restrictions, the other catering for the commercial market,
mainly financial firms and utilities. Both are headed by Cyberbit Chief
Executive Adi Dar.
Elbit CEO Bezhalel Machlis
described cyber as a major growth engine for the company, which is Israel's
largest listed defense company group with revenue of $3.3 billion in 2016. Its
Hermes drones, surveillance systems and simulators are top sellers in Europe
and South America.
While Cyberbit chief Dar
would not disclose how much revenue his division generates, he said that cyber
sales were growing by "strong double-digits" compared with Elbit's
overall growth of 5 percent in 2016. "We expect that pace to
continue," he told Reuters.
Cyberbit entered the
commercial market by developing detection and response systems to protect
"endpoints" such as laptops and mobile devices, where it competes
with Carbon Black and FireEye of the United States.
Dar said Cyberbit is
distinguished from its competitors because it is "playing on both sides of
the court" -- meaning it provides technologies that can both carry out cyber-attacks
and deliver defense.
"We build offensive
capabilities for governments," he said. "We know what agents should
look for because we are from that world."
Cyberbit is competing in a
cybersecurity market dominated by the country's biggest tech company Check
Point Software and is seeing strong demand for its cyber simulation platforms.
These create a virtual
network and virtual attacks, helping the public and private sectors train staff
to tackle the growing threat.
The simulation platforms
are seeing strong demand given an increasing shortage for skilled cyberworkers.
Globally, 1.8 million cybersecurity positions will be
unfilled by 2022, the Center for Cyber Safety and Education estimates.
In the coming weeks, the
Maryland Range training center will open in Baltimore, using a Cyberbit
platform to train workers in protecting critical infrastructure.
In February, Cyberbit
agreed with Japanese service provider Ni Cybersecurity to launch a training
center in Tokyo. Japan estimates it will have a shortage of 200,000 IT security
professionals by 2020, when it expects a sharp increase in cyber-attacks around
the Tokyo Olympics.
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