Intelligent CISO Issue 21 | Page 6

news Capgemini coordinates Phoenix cybersecurity project for European Commission s part of the European Horizon 2020 programme, Capgemini has been entrusted to coordinate Project Phoenix, a programme set up and funded by the European Commission (€8 million), to protect the electrical energy systems and networks in Europe. This three-year project began on September 1, 2019. A To address the security challenges facing energy infrastructure across Europe, Capgemini is helping the European Commission to strengthen the system by implementing a data protection programme which includes constant monitoring for attacks. In addition, as part of its mandate, Capgemini has participated in the development of incident scenarios that could lead to the compromise of critical data, with particular attention being paid to the specific nature of energy infrastructure operations. This approach has been designed to ensure that energy-infrastructure security is at the heart of each stage of the project. The European Commission chose to be accompanied by experts at a European level to enhance the security of energy infrastructure from the design stage and adopt an approach of continuous innovation, coordinate and manage security incidents, and accelerate research and development of security for this type of infrastructure. Coordinated by Capgemini, this mission is based on a consortium of 24 partners from 10 countries of the European Union. 6 Tamer Odeh, Regional Sales Director – Middle East, at SentinelOne Stephan Berner, CEO at Help AG HELP AG PARTNERS WITH SENTINELONE TO DELIVER AUTOMATED ENDPOINT PROTECTION elp AG, a leading cybersecurity solutions, services and consultancy provider in the Middle East, has signed an agreement with SentinelOne, an autonomous endpoint protection company. H As IT strategies adopt cloud and mobile-first approaches, increasing the number of connected devices on organisations’ networks, cybercriminals have shifted their focus towards targeting users and endpoint devices. With SentinelOne’s ability to mitigate the effects of attacks even after infection, this partnership enables Help AG to arm Middle Eastern enterprises against endpoint attacks. “As the region’s trusted security advisor, we are firmly committed to introducing best-in-class solutions to the Middle East – especially those that uniquely address key cybersecurity challenges our customers face. Today, endpoints such as laptops and smartphones are the primary workforce enablement tool and protecting them against the myriad of threats should be top priority for any business,” explained Stephan Berner, CEO at Help AG. “SentinelOne has been a disruptive force in the AV industry and their technologies perfectly align with the AI-focused strategy at Help AG. Together, we can enable businesses to automate vital security functions with confidence that their vital assets are comprehensively protected.” What sets SentinelOne apart from traditional antivirus providers is the company’s behavioural, machine-based models. By detecting almost any type of attack without any prior knowledge, this affords organisations protection in the rapidly evolving threat landscape. Issue 21 | www.intelligentciso.com