The deal adds malware analysis to Recorded Future’s existing lineup of threat information services. Credit: Solarseven / Getty Images In a move to broaden its portfolio of cybersecurity products, Boston-based threat intelligence collection and analysis firm Recorded Future has reached an agreement to purchase Dutch malware analysis company HatchingRecorded Future offers a wide range of different types of intelligence on digital threats, using proprietary predictive analytics to track public documents, potentially compromised credentials, and dark web traffic for insights into potential threats to client organizations. The addition of Hatching—whose specialty is malware sandboxing and analysis—broadens the company’s portfolio substantially.Christopher Ahlberg, CEO and co-founder of Recorded Future, said in a statement that automated malware analysis of the type provided by Hatching will be a critical new arrow in his company’s quiver. “Our clients will now have an intelligence advantage against malware exploits, one of the most pervasive threats facing every organization,” he said. Part of the idea behind this acquisition, according to Forrester Research principal analyst Brian Wrozek, is to offer something closer to one-stop shopping for organizations seeking an improved security profile. Hatching’s analysis platform is already broadly useful to many different kinds of security professionals, including forensics analysts, security engineers and incident responders, and combining it with Recorded Future’s existing products offers even more options for organizations attempting to prevent future attacks or recover from past ones.“[The deal] allows Recorded Future to further expand their threat intelligence portfolio appealing to customers who are looking to reduce their overall vendor footprint without sacrificing capabilities,” Wrozek said. “This can be a standalone service offering but the intelligence gained from analyzing malware can be used to further enhance their other offerings by adding more context to threats and threat actors.” Recorded Future confirmed that Hatching would continue to be offered as a standalone service for existing customers, so their use of the platform is unlikely to be affected in the short term.Longer-term, however, standalone customers might have some concerns, according to Wrozek. While the possibility of adding additional services is likely to please some, Hatching becoming part of a larger company with different product lines could, potentially, pose an issue.“There is the potential that this specialized malware analysis solution could receive less focus in the future at the expense of the broader portfolio,” he said.Terms of the Hatching purchase were not disclosed. It’s Recorded Future’s third since March 2021. That month saw the company buy up fraud analytics provider Gemini Advisory, for $52 million, and Recorded Future also acquired attack surface monitoring firm SecurityTrails in January of this year. Related content news F5 patches BIG-IP Next Central Manager flaws that could lead to device takeover Two high-risk vulnerabilities could allow attackers to gain full administrative control on devices via leaked password hashes. By Lucian Constantin May 08, 2024 5 mins Threat and Vulnerability Management Cloud Security Vulnerabilities news Suspected Chinese hack of Britain’s Ministry of Defence linked to contractor, minister confirms The UK’s defence minister would not confirm that the attack was conducted by an element of the Chinese state, rather blaming the “potential failings” of a partner. By John Dunn May 08, 2024 4 mins Aerospace and Defense Industry Data Breach Government news analysis Massive security hole in VPNs shows their shortcomings as a defensive measure Researchers found a deep, unpatchable flaw in virtual private networks dubbed Tunnelvision can allow attackers to siphon off data without any indication that they are there. By Evan Schuman May 08, 2024 8 mins Threat and Vulnerability Management Data and Information Security Network Security news DocGo says hackers stole patient data in a recent cyberattack The attack compromised some healthcare data with no material or financial losses, the company said. By Shweta Sharma May 08, 2024 3 mins Data Breach Hacking PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe