FAIRMONT, W.VA. – A cybersecurity company based in the county of Marion seeks to extend operations within the mountain state and across the country with the launch of new infrastructure technologies based on the cloud.
Agile5 technologies has announced the publication of their new automated compliance engine (ACE), an infrastructure system based on the cloud designed to adapt organizational needs to meet the federal standards of information systems and prevent external intrusions. The chief growth director of Agile5 technologies, Pete Fritsch, calls on the system a unique software system that analyzes the cloud -based security programs and determines what must be adjusted in enough time to prevent hackers from embarking on government systems.
“Ace provides this first level of defense where you say:” Have I configured everything correctly? “” Said Fritsch. “So that it is even more difficult to find a vulnerability.”
The ACE infrastructure engine examines the cloud storage configuration of a single company or a single company and follows avenues to ensure that no vulnerability is displayed when sending data that could allow theft of personal information. In a quick response time, the set of pre-pelled safety rules established in the system then presents the results on the cloud infrastructure with customizable and user-friendly dashboard views. This will allow any company, government entity or cyber-basé program to be determined quickly if the adjustments must be made according to the extension of intelligence.
“When you deploy something in the cloud, all the configurations you put in place are secure and encrypted properly, management is carried out correctly, and we have designed a tool to help you do so,” said Jacob Brozenick, manager of agile information security5 technologies. “It goes into your system, it examines everything you have, and it tells you what you miss.”
According to Fritsch, the ACE engine has already been launched as part of Agile5 technologies contracts with federal government agencies, with more planned in the near future. This includes contracts involving partners in a previous history with the company in the public sector, in particular the General Services Administration, the United States Ministry of Justice and the Federal Aviation Administration. More work is expected in the near future due to employees who live in the state of the mountain day day and night.
“We have deployed this for many of our customers, in fact, we just had a large migration from a on -site data center to a fully -based deployment,” said Fritsch during the Wajr conversation on the city. “Jake was standing up to all hours of the night by making a late cover, and it was a great success, and Ace was a large part of it.”
Hope for Fritsch and other executives with Agile5 technologies is that systems like ACE will be able to support the use of cybersecurity in Virginia-Western. Not only does the company plan to continue working with potential partners to implement the ACE system, but Agile5 also plans to continue working in the development of software for human -centered design programs (HCD) as well as services related to security operations, cloud infrastructure and biometric digitization. With plans to develop in the near future, the company plans to continue to develop in the mountain state while serving a product that we do not see anywhere else in the country.
“You see writing on the wall, you see where things go, and you know you can do it, just because it is in Silicon Valley does not mean that you cannot develop and design things here,” said Brozenick. “So you promote these relationships with talent and the people you know are local, you rally around a product and an idea, and you build it.”