BitDepthFlexxon introduces silicon-level cybersecurity protection to TT

Flexxon introduces silicon-level cybersecurity protection to TT

Above: Irene Yeo and Nelson Chia present Flexxon’s cybersecurity solutions at the Mariott. Photo by Mark Lyndersay.

BitDepth#1459 for May 20, 2024

On Tuesday, Pinaka Consulting hosted an enterprise-level introduction to Flexxon’s® X-PHY® cybersecurity products.

Pinaka has previously been involved in blockchain and central bank digital currencies consulting along with ransomware tracking on the blockchain before taking this new step into hardware protection solutions.

Pinaka CEO Shiva Bissessar called on local businesses to begin taking the role of Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) more seriously, and to consider integrating the position into upper-level executive level decision-making. The company will represent Flexxon® locally and in the Caribbean region.

“Pinaka has traditionally focused on information security based consultancy,” said Bissessar.
“In stepping into the cybersecurity solution provider role, we sought to bring unique innovation to the local and wider regional Caribbean market.”

Flexxon was represented by Irene Yeo, who gave an explanatory keynote on behalf of the female founded and led Singapore cybersecurity company.

Shiva Bissessar (far left) at the Flexxon presentation with invited guests.

Flexxon began business in 2007 under the leadership of CEO Camellia Chan with a line of products that targeted niche industrial, medical, automotive and aerospace sectors before making a change in 2017 to static security solutions.

By 2019, those solutions had evolved into the company’s first X-Phy secure solid state drive (SSD) with embedded artificial intelligence.

Flexon introduced its newest hardware protection systems last week, a NAND flash memory solution that’s available in an NVME form factor as well as a one-slot PCI-E card for enterprise installations.

The new X-PHY product provides hardware level security that doesn’t conflict with other software solutions save for drive level encryption products, since the cyber secure drive does its own encryption as part of its protection regime.

The SSD-based hardware protection delivers a broad range of security responses by first creating a single access point through which data flows.

The resulting data stream is monitored by software that’s embedded in a chip that’s part of the drive hardware itself, providing a continuous review of access patterns using AI in the chip controller that monitors for possible malware intrusions with real-time detection and response to suspicious activity or patterns of attack consistent with known malware.

The on-chip AI intelligence can lock out new threats by isolating unusual patterns of access.

Regarding updates to the software embedded in the X-PHY, Flexxon responded via messaging that, “We do not need constant updates like software [solutions].
Our [infrequent] updates are for firmware or feature updates only. Detection is based on read/write/overwrite [patterns] within the drive and all commands need to bypass the firmware on our chipset for analysis and detection through the one door access [implemented using] the PCIE and NVME protocols.”

Flexon’s X-Phy NVME solution.

Yeo noted that an increasingly critical vector for data breaches and leaks is lost or stolen devices. Flexon’s drive level security measures for SSDs and other flash media storage devices offer a defence against intrusions even when hardware is no longer under the control of a company or its agents.

Flexxon has established partnerships with Lenovo, Asus, Dynabook and HP to deliver what they describe as “AI-Augmented laptops” that implement the X-PHY security solutions in a ready-made package. Flexon made no announcements about the availability of this laptop series on the local market.

By 2025, the company plans to expand into enterprise level server and data center installations with Enterprise Server Defender, which will introduce its own stand-alone operating system and applications to the cybersecurity mix, building on drive level protections with live, AI powered detection of data stream anomalies and protection across all seven layers of operating system interconnection.

Server Defender promises multi-level protections on chip, including its patented Matrix Shield technology, proactive live anomaly detection, real-time incident, response, uninterrupted instant restoration and unidirectional assessment.

According to Flexxon’s promotional materials, “Server Defender lies outside the process integration stack but tracks all hardware computations happening between the CPU, Platform Controller Hub (PCH), host processor chipsets and the motherboard itself.”

“We constructed a barrier isolation wrapper that monitors operations between Direct Memory Access (DMA) and the host processors, eliminating any extraneous operations in the cache and thereby nullifying the potential for DMA attacks.”

“The reception from the market so far has recognised the unique nature of these solutions in examining the execution of read, write and overwrite instructions at the SSD level,” Bissessar said after the morning’s presentations to local IT professionals.

Both X-PHY products are immediately available from Pinaka Consulting. The Server Defender product is available but is currently in beta.

No more fire in these wires

No more fire in these wires

FireWire effectively died with MacOS 26 Tahoe, when Apple removed the drivers that enabled the OS-level connection to its operating system.
Read More
What the heck is chip binning?

What the heck is chip binning?

Instead of manufacturing multiple versions of a processor with different numbers of active cores, manufacturers create one master processor and then test the yields.
Read More
Solving the region’s journalism problem

Solving the region’s journalism problem

There's formulaic approach to the content that we produce that sometimes totally denies or is ignorant of audience interest.
Read More
Tambini to journalists: “Keep doing what you’re doing”

Tambini to journalists: “Keep doing what you’re doing”

There are lots of international standards to support that idea of the state supporting the media, but that support is often abused, so it has to be based on real...
Read More
How do we unfetter journalism from the shackles of business?

How do we unfetter journalism from the shackles of business?

Journalism must dissect information, deepen the understanding of it and bring clarity to the news consumer.
Read More
What the Canvas hack tells us about higher education software

What the Canvas hack tells us about higher education software

Instructure is managing a very different proposition than most software vendors do. It has positioned itself as an education partner managing a wide range of integrations with education software tools.
Read More
Ghost women in AI? Hardly!

Ghost women in AI? Hardly!

"When I first came out of university a million years ago, everybody was like, why build something here? Just take what's in Europe, lift and shift. That has been the...
Read More
IShowSpeed: Here and gone

IShowSpeed: Here and gone

Watkins has 53 million subscribers on YouTube and his Trinidad and Tobago visit alone clocked 4.8 million views for a five hour and 47 minute stream.
Read More
How TT journalists can turn modern media realities to advantage

How TT journalists can turn modern media realities to advantage

The faceless, anonymized journalist adhering to a house style holds little value for this next generation audience.
Read More
Reuters report on young news readers holds no surprises

Reuters report on young news readers holds no surprises

The critical 18-34 age group recorded a decline in enthusiasm for daily news from 79 percent in 2017 to 64 percent in 2025
Read More
The state of ransomware in the Caribbean

The state of ransomware in the Caribbean

The report counted 21 confirmed dumps of information to the dark web, but Parasram estimates that twice that number were breached.
Read More
Digital döstädning

Digital döstädning

You may not care after you're gone, but a computer desktop littered with file icons is nobody's idea of a good time.
Read More
The garbage infesting my in-box

The garbage infesting my in-box

Do not click on links before fully investigating them. Do not call given phone numbers.
Read More
TSTT’s payments problem (updated)

TSTT’s payments problem (updated)

Something seems to have collapsed in what should be an efficient, all-digital payment and verification loop.
Read More
Is Apple’s Neo the One?

Is Apple’s Neo the One?

Ease of repair puts a firm hand on the scale in favour of the Neo for parents looking for a laptop suitable for use in education.
Read More
Privacy and your travel information

Privacy and your travel information

A privacy notice to let individuals understand what data is being collected, the legal reasons, retention period, security to protect data and a contact for any questions should have been...
Read More
TATT announces ambitious three-year strategic plan

TATT announces ambitious three-year strategic plan

The authority's two-decade-old arguments for a fee from over-the-top (OTT) providers has consistently drawn a blank, but it remains on the strategic agenda.
Read More
Samsung’s S26 leans in hard on AI

Samsung’s S26 leans in hard on AI

Some users including those with data that requires above average security, may not greet these agentic AI advancements with enthusiasm.
Read More
A 2026 manifesto for Carnival

A 2026 manifesto for Carnival

The idea of Carnival, the spark of the individual, rebellious, expressed as boldly inventive creation still catches fire.
Read More
A hiss from a rose

A hiss from a rose

There is likely to be a need for sex re-education to deprogram children who see sex as a wrestling match.
Read More
No more fire in these wires No more fire in these wires
What the heck is chip binning? What the heck is chip binning?
Solving the region’s journalism problem Solving the region’s journalism problem
Tambini to journalists: “Keep doing what you’re doing” Tambini to journalists: “Keep doing what...
How do we unfetter journalism from the shackles of business? How do we unfetter journalism from...
What the Canvas hack tells us about higher education software What the Canvas hack tells us...
Ghost women in AI? Hardly! Ghost women in AI? Hardly!
IShowSpeed: Here and gone IShowSpeed: Here and gone
How TT journalists can turn modern media realities to advantage How TT journalists can turn modern...
Reuters report on young news readers holds no surprises Reuters report on young news readers...
The state of ransomware in the Caribbean The state of ransomware in the...
Digital döstädning Digital döstädning
The garbage infesting my in-box The garbage infesting my in-box
TSTT’s payments problem (updated) TSTT’s payments problem (updated)
Is Apple’s Neo the One? Is Apple’s Neo the One?
Privacy and your travel information Privacy and your travel information
TATT announces ambitious three-year strategic plan TATT announces ambitious three-year strategic plan
Samsung’s S26 leans in hard on AI Samsung’s S26 leans in hard on...
A 2026 manifesto for Carnival A 2026 manifesto for Carnival
A hiss from a rose A hiss from a rose

🤞 Get connected!

A once weekly email notification of new stories on TechNewsTT. Just that. No spam.

Possible UI Glitch. Click top right corner to dismiss 👉

Get Connected!

A once weekly email notification of new stories on TechNewsTT.

Just that. No spam.

RELATED POSTS