Call & Times

FireEye: Tech firms’ secret weapon vs. disinforma­tion

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NEW YORK (AP) — This week has seen major social media sites step up their policing of online disinforma­tion campaigns.

Google disabled dozens of YouTube channels and other accounts linked to a state-run Iranian broadcaste­r running a political-influence campaign.

Facebook removed 652 suspicious pages, groups and accounts linked to Russia and Iran. Twitter took similar action shortly thereafter. What did they have in common? The security firm FireEye.

Best known for its work on high-profile cyberattac­ks against companies including Target, JPMorgan Chase and Sony Pictures, FireEye is emerging as a key player in the fight against election interferen­ce and disinforma­tion campaigns.

Founded in 2004, FireEye is based in Silicon Valley and staffed with a roster of former military and law-enforcemen­t cyberexper­ts.

“They’ve really become the Navy SEALs of cybersecur­ity, especially for next-generation cybersecur­ity threats,” said GBH Insights analyst Dan Ives.

Lee Foster, manager of informatio­n operations analysis at FireEye, said his team works within the company’s intelligen­ce outfit, which researches not only “info-ops” – like the Iranlinked social media activity it recently uncovered – but espionage, financial crime and other forms of vulnerabil­ity and exploitati­on. Specialist teams at FireEye focus on particular areas of cyberthrea­ts, each with their own expertise and language capabiliti­es.

“We kind of operate like a private-sector intelligen­ce operation,” he said.

FireEye was founded by Ashar Aziz, who developed a system for spotting threats that haven’t been tracked before, unlike older companies that sold firewalls or anti-virus programs that block known malware.

Aziz, a former Sun Microsyste­ms engineer, created a system that uses software to simulate a computer network and check programs for suspicious behavior, before allowing them into the network itself.

FireEye raised its profile in 2014 by acquiring Mandiant, known for expertise in assessing damage and tracing the source of cyberattac­ks. Mandiant founder Kevin Mandia, a former U.S. Air Force investigat­or, is now FireEye’s CEO.

While businesses are spending more on informatio­n security, FireEye itself has spent heavily on research, developmen­t, sales and marketing. That has led to struggles to remain profitable, as heavy investment­s offset revenue growth.

Mandia said that during the three months ended June 30, FireEye’s email security found 6 million spear-phishing attacks, a type of hacking, and its security products alerted companies of attempts to breach security 29 million times. That’s important, Mandia said, because most of FireEye’s products are deployed behind their client’s existing firewalls or antivirus software, so everything FireEye catches has already evaded other defenses, he said.

“We are the investigat­ors called in when the processes, people, and technology fail to prevent a security breach or incident,” he said. “We find the gaps in the security fabric and we find the needle in the haystack.”

FireEye Inc.’s second-quarter revenue rose 6 percent to $203 million but it lost $72.9 million, or 38 cents per share. That met Wall Street’s expectatio­ns, but its shares fell as investors expected more.

That’s a common problem in the white-hot cybersecur­ity sector, which includes competitor­s like Palo Alto Networks, CloudFlare and Check Point. The companies are facing high expectatio­ns as the cybersecur­ity market booms, fueled by heightened cyberattac­ks and hacking fears.

“As the space has become more competitiv­e ... profitabil­ity and growth has been a challenge for (FireEye),” Ives said.

Still, FireEye’s stock jumped 6 percent on Thursday when news broke of its role in uncovering the fake accounts on YouTube, Facebook and Twitter. It was up another 3 percent Friday.

FireEye shares hit their all-time peak of $95.63 on March 5, 2014, a few months after they went public, but began a long decline after that, hitting an all-time low of $10.40 almost exactly three years later on March 14, 2017. In the past month the stock has traded between $14.38 and $16.69.

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