Do you know what software is running in your devices and its provenance? Industrial Cyber spoke to a number of experts across critical infrastructure on software supply chain risk as geopolitical pressures rise. “Organizations need to know what software they are running on their devices, where it comes from, and whether it can be trusted under pressure,” Joe Saunders, RunSafe Founder and CEO said. “As geopolitical tensions rise, there should be a shift from cost-driven sourcing to trust-driven sourcing." Read all the commentary here: https://runsafe.ly/4ubGaDt
RunSafe Security Inc.
Computer and Network Security
McLean, Virginia 2,559 followers
Protecting embedded systems across critical infrastructure with automated vulnerability identification & code protection
About us
RunSafe Security protects embedded software across critical infrastructure, delivering automated vulnerability identification and software hardening from build-time to runtime to defend the software supply chain and critical systems without compromising performance or requiring code rewrites. The RunSafe Security Platform includes the authoritative build-time SBOM generator for embedded systems and C/C++ projects, automated vulnerability identification and risk quantification, and patented memory relocation techniques to mitigate memory-based vulnerabilities. Headquartered in McLean, Virginia, with an office in Huntsville, Alabama, RunSafe Security’s customers span the aerospace and defense, energy, operational technology, industrial automation, transportation and automotive, medical device, and high-tech manufacturing verticals.
- Website
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http://runsafesecurity.com
External link for RunSafe Security Inc.
- Industry
- Computer and Network Security
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- McLean, Virginia
- Type
- Privately Held
- Founded
- 2015
- Specialties
- Cyber hardening, Embedded systems, RASP, OT, IIoT, ICS, IoT, Cybersecurity, Critical Infrastructure, Automotive, Healthcare, National Security, Data Center, Binary stirring, Medical Device, SBOMs, Software Bill of Materials, Runtime Exploit Prevention, Code Protection, Memory Safety, and Software Supply Chain Security
Products
RunSafe Security Inc.
Threat Intelligence Platforms
The RunSafe Security Platform delivers comprehensive cybersecurity solutions for embedded systems deployed across critical infrastructure. It includes capabilities to generate build-time Software Bill of Materials (SBOMs), identify vulnerabilities, and quantify reductions in attack surfaces. Unique memory relocation techniques prevent memory-based exploits while maintaining system performance. Our monitoring of runtime crash data distinguishes between bugs and attacks ensuring precise incident response and enhancing overall software security and resilience.
Locations
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Primary
Get directions
1775 Tysons Blvd
McLean, Virginia 22102, US
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Get directions
3001 9th Ave SW
Huntsville, Alabama 35805, US
Employees at RunSafe Security Inc.
Updates
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AI is moving faster than the systems designed to control it. In national security environments, that creates a real problem: how do you build trust in software that evolves and makes decisions at machine speed? In the latest episode of Exploited: The Cyber Truth, Paul Ducklin sits down with the host of In the Nic of Time and Former DAF CSO Nicolas M. Chaillan. Key takeaways: • Why multi-model AI strategies matter • How AI is changing DevSecOps pipelines • Where policy is falling behind reality • What zero trust means in an AI-driven system • Why restricting AI capabilities can introduce risk If you're responsible for building or securing software in high-stakes environments, this conversation is worth your time. 🎧 Listen here: https://runsafe.ly/3QIvnCf #AI #DevSecOps #ZeroTrust
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Join us for this webinar! There's a lot to discuss in the realm of medical device software security. Jim Hammerand will be hosting the discussion with Joe Saunders and Brad Tenenholtz on May 12.
A new report warns that AI technologies are enabling more cyberattacks on medical devices and healthcare organizations. Skyler Rivera has the latest details from RunSafe Security Inc.'s 2026 Medical Device Cybersecurity Index at Medical Design & Outsourcing: https://lnkd.in/gvt_Cpmy And on May 12, I'm hosting an MDO Webinar on medtech security with RunSafe founder and CEO Joe Saunders and Brad Tenenholtz, the former BD product security officer who's now at Splyce LLC. Register now and if you can't make it that day, we'll email you as soon as the on-demand replay is ready: https://lnkd.in/gbyi_EDV
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RunSafe Security Inc. reposted this
Medical device cyberattacks are rising. So is the share of those attacks causing real harm to patients. New survey data from 551 healthcare purchasing decision-makers across the U.S., UK, and Germany finds that 24% of organizations have experienced an attack on a medical device, according to RunSafe Security Inc. Of those, 80% reported moderate or significant impact on patient care. Procurement standards are tightening, and budgets are increasing. Read more: https://lnkd.in/gF__W2-x #HealthTech #MedicalDevices #Cybersecurity #HealthcareIT #AIinHealthcare #HealthAI #PatientSafety
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RunSafe’s 2026 Medical Device Cybersecurity Index released today, and the findings show that cybersecurity is playing a key role in procurement, vendor trust, and patient safety. The report breaks down where requirements are heading and how manufacturers can stay competitive. Download the report for the full insights from healthcare decision-makers on medical device procurement, risk, and resilience. https://runsafe.ly/4tMRRkm
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Will Anthropic's Mythos break everything or give a leg up to defenders? When unauthorized users gained access to Mythos last week, there was a lot of chatter about the implications of access to a model that Anthropic meant to keep under lock and key. One thing we do know, AI is going to accelerate how quickly vulnerabilities are found and exploited. Defenders will need to rethink their patching strategy to stay ahead. Shane Fry comments in The Independent. https://runsafe.ly/3OKF2rq
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Anthropic's Mythos announcement confirmed something security teams have been bracing for. AI can now find vulnerabilities and write working exploits faster than most organizations can patch. And then, NIST announced it can no longer keep up with the volume of CVE submissions—which means the enrichment data your tools depend on is becoming less reliable at exactly the wrong moment. Our April newsletter covers what these two developments mean together, and what security teams can do now. Read it below.
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How can cyber teams adapt to less NVD data? Vulnerability disclosures are increasing, in part fueled by AI, at the same time as NIST is cutting back on enriching CVE data. As Shane Fry notes in Dark Reading, security teams will need to look to multiple sources of vulnerability data and, most importantly, focus on deploying security solutions that "prevent the exploit of bugs and zero-days even before patches are available or the vulnerability is disclosed." Read more: https://runsafe.ly/4tExwxx
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We’re just over a week away from our roundtable with Automotive World on “Scaling Autonomy: AI, Software Complexity, and Next-Generation Vehicle Architectures.” Join us on May 7 to hear how industry leaders are tackling these issues and building the next generation of autonomous systems. Date: May 7, 2026 Time: 11:00 AM EST Register here: https://runsafe.ly/4dZesoB
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8 years at RunSafe—thank you, Victor Williams! 🎉 Vic has been part of RunSafe’s journey through many stages of growth, helping shape the technology and engineering foundation that protects software running in critical systems today. We’re grateful for the expertise, perspective, and dedication he’s brought to RunSafe over the past eight years. Happy RunSafe anniversary!
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