Founder and CEO @ Cylake

Joined April 2009
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Nir Zuk retweeted
If you’re looking for a role where every day feels the same, Cylake isn’t for you. We’re in our early days, and things move quickly. People take ownership over what they build and care deeply about getting it right. For some people, that’s exciting. For others, it’s exhausting. If the first reaction sounds more like you, you’ll probably fit in here. Check out our open roles: cylake.com/careers
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Nir Zuk retweeted
Every company begins as an idea. What makes someone actually join? We asked Ryan Salsamendi when Cylake went from an interesting concept to "I'm in." The answer was the people behind it and the opportunity to challenge conventional thinking in cybersecurity. Hear why Ryan decided this was something worth building.
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Nir Zuk retweeted
May 29
Many organizations can’t move security operations to the cloud. Highly regulated environments require a different cybersecurity architecture. Cylake CEO @nirzuk breaks down the thinking behind what we’re building in his interview with @pulse2news: pulse2.com/cylake-profile-ni…
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Nir Zuk retweeted
youtube.com/watch?v=o-msCOMM… I had a great conversation with @nirzuk in the first episode of Inside Cybersecurity with @CylakeAI. The cybersecurity industry has spent years adding more tools and more layers, but the bigger issue may be the architecture underneath them all.
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For a long time, “data” in cybersecurity meant logs and events. As that definition expanded, most systems continued to operate on a limited view of data. Cybersecurity is now a data problem. Read my thoughts here: open.substack.com/pub/cylake…

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Nir Zuk retweeted
AI will reshape cybersecurity, but not in the way most expect. It will separate systems that operate on complete data from those that don’t. This is a data access and sovereignty challenge, not an AI one. Cylake is building a platform without those compromises.
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Nir Zuk retweeted
Mar 18
[1/4] Sovereignty is the next firewall. In the AI era, the most important security boundary is now about who controls the infrastructure processing your data. 🧵
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[1/5] Everyone is asking whether AI will replace cybersecurity products. But the real question is whether our current security architecture can even support what AI requires. To understand the effect of AI on cybersecurity, let’s roll back the clock for more than a decade.
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Generative models can operate on far more data to review code and infrastructure, identify anomalies and vulnerabilities, and prioritize and automate remediation. Does that mean cybersecurity products as we know them are in trouble? I see it differently.
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[5/5] Read more in the Substack I wrote: open.substack.com/pub/cylake…

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Nir Zuk retweeted
[1/5] The world’s largest and most regulated institutions demand state-of-the-art cybersecurity, but many cannot depend on products tied to the public cloud. We believe that shouldn’t exclude them from access to top-tier protection.
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30 Oct 2013
@piresfábio I believe anti-spam belongs in a dedicated system rather than in an inline firewall #askpanw via crowdchat.net/post/3190

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