ArchTIS Ltd has launches a new solution for integrating, securing and governing sensitive and classified structured data from multiple sources at scale and speed called Trusted Data Integration (TDI).
The company is targeting the big data market with its new product, which is currently valued at US$163.4 billion and expected to grow at a 12.7% compounding annual growth rate (CAGR) to US$474 billion.
AR9 will be targeting the defence and supply chain industries with this new technology.
TDI allows customers to add zero trust capabilities to structured data access with centralised security policy orchestration to enforce ‘need to know’ and ‘need to share’ principles across the data landscape.
A policy authoring engine and workflows enable customers to securely display data based on the user and provide reporting for compliance.
It provides centralised security policy orchestration and enforcement using attribute-based access control (ABAC) to ensure data is secure and governed.
Meeting strict security requirements
“This latest innovation demonstrates archTIS’ ability to generate and commercialise valuable intellectual property assets which we believe will increase shareholder value,” ArchTIS managing director and CEO Daniel Lai said.
“By actively listening to our customers, such as our engagement with KPMG in the One Defence Data Program, we are always looking to innovate and expand our offerings to better meet their needs.
“Our defence industry clients struggled to integrate and aggregate classified structured data while maintaining strict compliance requirements and tightly controlling access.
“Leveraging our deep expertise in policy-enforced ABAC and unstructured data protection, TDI expands our product stack to offer a solution for integrating, visualising and securing structured data at scale.
“TDI is designed to enable secure data fabric-enabled defence and supply chain data services.
“It solves these challenges with agility to meet business needs and enable customers to maintain a competitive edge.”
According to ArchTIS, organisations spend up to 60% of their tech budget on analysing and managing structured data, particularly struggling to consolidate distributed sensitive and classified structured data and display it in a secure, segmented, compliant and auditable manner.