Attack Surface Management , Security Operations , Video
CrowdStrike CEO on Why It's Tough to Defend Sensitive Assets
George Kurtz on How Reposify Helps Customers Locate and Safeguard Priority AssetsOrganizations today struggle with both new attack surface challenges such as cloud configuration and exposed buckets and long-standing ones around vulnerable ports and infrastructure.
See Also: Real-World Strategies for Securing Remote Workforces and Data
CEO George Kurtz says CrowdStrike's recent purchase of Reposify will help clients guard against attacks by giving them a deeper understanding of where their priority assets are and what exposure they have. Combining Reposify with CrowdStrike's data-gathering capabilities on the cloud and endpoint and Asset Graph and Threat Graph tools should help clients make risk-based decisions to protect sensitive assets (see: CrowdStrike to Buy Reposify to Secure Attack Surface, Assets).
"The overall goal is to help customers really understand what they have, how to protect it and make sure that, from an integration standpoint, it becomes seamless within the Falcon console," Kurtz says. "The first level of integration is making it work within our console, and after that, it's deeper and more integration through the entire workflow that we've created."
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Kurtz also discusses:
- How IoT and cloud security bets complement CrowdStrike's endpoint heritage;
- How CrowdStrike's approach to CNAPP is different from Orca, Wiz and Lacework;
- How purchasing Preempt addresses pressing customer needs around identity.
Kurtz co-founded CrowdStrike in 2012 and has served as CEO since its inception. He has more than 29 years of experience in the security space, including extensive experience driving revenue growth and scaling organizations across the globe. Before establishing CrowdStrike, Kurtz spent nearly seven years at McAfee, a $2.5 billion security company, serving as worldwide chief technology officer and general manager as well as executive vice president of enterprise. Prior to joining McAfee, Kurtz in October 1999 started and led worldwide security products and services company Foundstone, which had one of the leading incident response practices in the industry. Foundstone was acquired by McAfee in October 2004.