Every year I try to recap what I saw and did at RSA, so here’s the capture for 2017. It won’t be comprehensive, but should get most major things.

Impressions

Activities

RSA Vendor Categories

RSA organized their vendors into the following spaces, which I found interesting enough by itself.

A Security Vendor List

I didn’t get to walk the floor as much this year as I normally do, but I did see or hear about a few key ones. My favorite types of technologies right now are based around data analysis, biometric authentication, attack surface and risk visibility/scoring, and deception.

What I’ve done here is gone through the RSA 2017 Vendor List and capture most of the technology vendors that had a presence at RSA. I used the official vendor list as the starting point and then discarded certain types of company, like services orgs, companies with no good description of what they do, or companies that are super well-known.

This is the overall list, and the section below I call out some interesting ones.

[ NOTE: These are my own hyper-concise summaries for these vendors and many could be inaccurate. I created this list either based on my own experience with the vendor or by reading the short summary they had published on the RSA site. Don’t take it personally if I mangle a product you’re close to; reach out and I’ll fix it. ]

[ …to be continued. Currently stopped in the D’s, but will continue soon. If you want to help let me know on Twitter. ]

Interesting Vendors

I’ve given uninteresting one-sentence summaries for these just like in the list above, but trust me—if you haven’t looked at these vendors before, you should at least look into them. It doesn’t mean they’re perfect, or that they can even do what they say they do, but it does mean that their space or their approach to that space is interesting.

[ NOTE: I don’t endorse any of these products, for a couple of reasons. First, I don’t endorse things I haven’t had direct experience with in some form. Second, I run the consulting group for my employer (IOActive), and we are an extremely vendor agnostic company. So while I might say I like what a company is doing, or that you should look into it, there’s a big difference between that and an endorsement. I’m more than happy to do the former, and will almost never do the latter. ]

Notes

  1. The vendor list is very much focused on technologies, so there aren’t many solution or service companies listed.
  2. Some of the interesting vendors I got from my own knowledge, from the RSA list, and from the Momentum Partners presentation.
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