Deepwatch Expands to India as New Bengaluru Cyber Hub Raises the Bar for MDR Providers

Related

Depthfirst Secures $40M to Advance AI-Driven Vulnerability Management

What happened Cybersecurity startup Depthfirst has raised $40 million in...

Critical Cal.com Authentication Bypass Lets Attackers Take Over User Accounts

What happened A critical Cal.com authentication bypass lets attackers take...

International Takedown Disrupts RedVDS Cybercrime Platform Driving Phishing and Fraud

What happened International takedown disrupts RedVDS cybercrime platform driving phishing...

Share

What happened
Deepwatch, a U.S.-based cybersecurity firm, has opened a new Global Capability Centre (GCC) in Bengaluru, India.

Who is affected
Enterprises relying on Deepwatch for managed detection and response and global customers expecting continuous threat monitoring, plus potential cybersecurity professionals in India looking to join the company’s growing team.

Why CISOs should care
The new GCC strengthens Deepwatch’s engineering and AI-powered threat detection capabilities. That could lead to more advanced, faster, and scalable managed security services — raising the bar for threat readiness. At the same time it might shift expectations for MDR providers globally, increasing pressure on in-house security teams to match similar speed and breadth.

3 practical actions

  1. Review your current MDR provider’s capabilities and ask if they can match the scale and AI-driven innovation emerging from firms like Deepwatch.

  2. Update vendor risk assessments: check how global operations and offshore development hubs affect data handling, compliance, and response times.

  3. Strengthen internal SOC readiness: use this as a prompt to test your incident detection, response, and collaboration workflows against the improved threat standards the market is shifting toward.