
PacketSled said it deeply examines layers 3-7 of every session on the network in real time, determining the “who, what, when, where, and how” of each session it sees, and securely storing these sessions over days, weeks, months, or years, making a rich forensic history instantly accessible.
“As a society, we’ve moved from shock that another brand name has been breached to the position of uncomfortable normalcy. CEOs, CISOs, and boards are now being judged on the quality and speed of their response, in addition to the conditions that led to the incident,” said Matt Harrigan, PacketSled’s President & CEO.
“To date, the tools available to the enterprise have not been usable, scalable or cost-effective enough to get the widespread adoption that will positively impact global cybercrime statistics. Our goal is to make easily consumable breach detection, network forensics, and incident response capabilities available to everyone,” Harrigan added.