DoControl, the automated Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) security company, announced a platform expansion with the launch of its comprehensive Shadow Apps solution. Building on prior innovations that address mission-critical use cases, DoControl’s newest module introduces shadow SaaS application discovery, monitoring, and remediation to better protect businesses from SaaS supply chain attacks.
SaaS application-to-application connectivity features increase risk by introducing machine identities that are often overprivileged, unsanctioned, and unmonitored. Compromised machine identities can easily gain permission to read, write, and delete sensitive data on improperly managed applications, significantly increasing security, business, and compliance risk for organizations. DoControl’s SaaS Security Platform expansion provides complete visibility and control across all sanctioned and unsanctioned SaaS applications to close compliance gaps and remediate supply chain-based attack vectors automatically.
The significant growth of SaaS applications, the demand to integrate them, and the economic pressures to consolidate vendors are contributing to a market need for a single service platform that provides centralized security across disparate applications. Offering CASB, DLP, Insider Risk, Workflows, and now Shadow Apps, DoControl has emerged as the end-to-end SaaS Security platform provider to help security teams do more with less overhead.
The expansion of the DoControl SaaS Security Platform enables comprehensive “shadow application” governance through:
“Data security is paramount, yet many tools lack the granularity and suite of capabilities modern businesses need to secure sensitive data and operations – particularly in the complex and interconnected world of SaaS applications,” said Adam Gavish, CEO and Co-founder, DoControl. “Our expanded platform offers a fully unified solution for seamlessly securing both human and machine access so businesses can avoid sensitive data loss, regulatory penalties, and revenue impacts stemming from the mismanagement of the SaaS estate.”