Re/Code
There's reason to believe him. In addition to his startup, he's also the CTO of Deutsche Telekom Innovation Laboratories in Israel. And he's the chief security officer of Cyber Security Research Center at Ben-Gurion University.
Dudu Mimran
The founders then realized it had commercial applications in preventing what's known as "zero-day" attacks, when hackers use holes found in an operating system for which there is no patch. Zero-day attacks are an
In techno-speak, Morphisec has created a version of Windows that "randomizes all the memory" for specific Windows applications, Mimran describes.
By making computer memory a moving target, a hacker can't mess with it, and therefore can't cause damage to the rest of the computer or the data.
Among beta users so far, Morphisec says it has a promising 100% success rate in stopping hackers without crying wolf with a bunch of "false positives." False positives are incidents incorrectly labeled as hack attacks.
The company has raised a $1.5 million in seed funding from a major Israeli VC, JVC Partners. That's no guarantee that that enterprises will buy this new secure version of Windows. But it's interesting that Mimran and gang are working on it. And Microsoft, who has a big presence in Israel, is no doubt watching.