Singapore – Cohesity has announced a series of new cyber resilience innovations and partnerships at its Catalyst 1 Data Security Summit, extending its Five-Step Cyber Resilience Framework to enterprises and government organisations across the APAC region and beyond.
The updates are designed to strengthen protection for compute, container, storage and database workloads across Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud, while also introducing a new identity resilience solution.
The company has launched on-premises isolated data vaults for organisations with data sovereignty requirements, expanded its integration with AI-native data security platform Cyera, and introduced AI-powered enhancements to Cohesity Gaia, its enterprise knowledge discovery assistant.
“In today’s threat landscape, having the right technology and partnerships is vital to strengthening every pillar of cyber resilience,” Gregory Satton, chief technology officer of Asia Pacific and Japan at Cohesity, explained.
He added, “Combined with AI-powered insights from Cohesity Gaia, these capabilities support all five steps of cyber resilience – from data protection and recovery to threat detection, application resilience, and risk posture optimisation – helping organisations recover faster and unlock greater strategic value from their data.”
Cohesity’s Five-Step Cyber Resilience Framework outlines measures organisations can adopt to improve their resilience against cyber threats: protecting all data, ensuring recoverability, detecting and investigating threats, practising application resilience, and optimising data risk posture.
To support data protection, the company plans to expand its connector library with 40 additional integrations across leading cloud services by the end of 2025. It has also introduced Cohesity Identity Resilience, developed with Semperis, to strengthen Microsoft Active Directory security and recovery.
Additionally, NetBackup DirectIO will enable Cohesity Data Cloud to act as an immutable storage layer, designed to improve recovery speeds and reduce costs.
New measures have also been introduced across recovery, detection, application resilience and risk optimisation. These include FortKnox Self-managed, an on-premises version of its cyber vaulting solution for organisations with sovereignty requirements, and enhanced threat detection capabilities powered by hash-based scanning and Google Threat Intelligence.
The company has also made RecoveryAgent generally available, providing automated tools for cyber recovery, alongside expanded Cyber Event Response Team services offering resilience consulting.
Finally, Cohesity has deepened its integration with Cyera to strengthen data classification and governance, enabling organisations to identify sensitive data, reduce redundancy, and meet compliance requirements in near real time.
“Our integration with Cohesity simplifies how organisations manage and protect their data,” Amit Raikar, vice president of strategic alliances at Cyera, commented.
He further added, “Together, we’re ensuring sensitive and regulated information remains compliant, secure, and recoverable to help enterprises eliminate the cyber resilience gap.”
These updates are intended to help organisations securely extract value from protected data to improve efficiency and innovation.