logo
Proofpoint Acquires Nuclei To Enrich AI Workplace Compliance

Proofpoint Acquires Nuclei To Enrich AI Workplace Compliance

Proofpoint has announced the acquisition of Nuclei, a U.S.-based technology company specializing in compliance archiving and AI-driven data enrichment for modern workplace communications.
With this acquisition, Proofpoint will further enhance its market-leading digital communications governance (DCG) offering with unmatched capabilities to capture, retain, and analyze communications across workspace collaboration platforms such as Microsoft Teams, Slack, Zoom, Webex, WhatsApp, and RingCentral Voice. In addition, Proofpoint will continue to support seamless integration with a broad range of archive and data governance platforms to ensure our connectors continue to deliver reliable, compliant interoperability across diverse customer environments.
'This acquisition enables us to accelerate our mission to deliver the most advanced and comprehensive AI-powered digital communications compliance platform in the market today, and we are excited to welcome Nuclei's talented team to Proofpoint,' said Harry Labana, senior vice president and general manager, DCG Business Unit at Proofpoint. 'By combining Proofpoint's leading human-centric security platform with Nuclei's pioneering technology, we can provide our customers with enhanced regulatory compliance while unlocking valuable insights from conversational data, which will be a game changer, particularly for highly regulated industries.'
The Nuclei platform allows organizations to: Capture and archive data from hundreds of applications : Nuclei integrates with over 100 applications to automatically capture and archive messages, attachments, and metadata across collaboration tools.
Unlock AI transformation with AI data enrichment : The platform offers speech recognition in over 120 languages, real-time transcription, automatic translation, and video analysis, enabling organizations to derive actionable insights from their communication data.
Seamlessly integrate with existing archive platforms : Nuclei supports seamless integration with major compliance archives, including Proofpoint, Smarsh, Global Relay, Arctera, and Microsoft Purview, ensuring that organizations meet regulatory requirements.
Benefit from scalability and security : Built on a serverless architecture following Amazon Web Services best practices, Nuclei emphasizes real-time compliance and robust security measures, including third-party audits by firms like Vanta. It offers end-to-end encryption to protect data in transit, encrypting content from point of capture to storing in the archive.
Human communication is a powerful source of insight, capturing thoughts, intentions, and shared knowledge that can drive behavioral understanding, process automation, and risk identification. Nuclei delivers a comprehensive platform that enables the capture, archiving, and analysis of this communication data—empowering organizations to extract actionable intelligence while ensuring compliance.
'At Nuclei, our mission is to democratize access to the world's most valuable data by transforming workplace communications into structured, compliant, and actionable information,' said Eric Franzen, CEO of Nuclei, Inc. 'This vision has fueled our innovation from the start. Partnering with Proofpoint allows us to extend that impact by helping the world's largest organizations boost productivity across hundreds of collaboration platforms while staying ahead of growing regulatory requirements.' 0 0

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

WhatsApp charts ad and creator‑subscription course
WhatsApp charts ad and creator‑subscription course

Arabian Post

timea day ago

  • Arabian Post

WhatsApp charts ad and creator‑subscription course

WhatsApp is rolling out a trio of monetisation tools within its Updates tab, signalling a significant shift in strategy while keeping its core service intact. Businesses and creator‑led Channels can now access new advertising options, subscribers can unlock exclusive content, and adverts will begin appearing in status updates – all isolated from personal chats. Approximately 1.5 billion users engage with the Updates feed daily, where ephemeral Status posts and one‑way Channels feature prominently. Meta, the parent company, is instituting three monetisation pillars: paid subscriptions to Channels, promoted placement for selected Channels, and targeted ads in Status postings. Paid Channel subscriptions enable creators and organisations to offer exclusive content to subscribed users. Channel owners can set monthly fees, receiving payment directly; Meta has confirmed it will forgo revenue share this year. Users continue to access non‑premium Channels at no cost, preserving inclusivity. ADVERTISEMENT Promoted Channels afford businesses and creators the ability to gain visibility within the Channels directory. These paid promotions echo Facebook and Instagram's ad features, enabling targeted outreach to engaged audiences on WhatsApp. Advertising in Status posts marks WhatsApp's first foray into native ad content. Businesses will now have the opportunity to insert sponsored Status updates visible alongside friends and family updates, with direct messaging links for user engagement. Meta assures these monetisation measures will not breach WhatsApp's end‑to‑end encryption on personal chats, calls, and Status. The Updates feed is portrayed as a separate, user‑opt‑in zone that won't affect the private messaging interface. Ad targeting will be based on broad demographic signals—such as language, city, activity within Updates, and cross‑app preferences if linked via Meta's Accounts Center—excluding personal message content. Meta highlights ongoing user trust as a cornerstone, emphasising that phone numbers will not be shared with advertisers and ad delivery does not draw from personal or group conversations. This assurance follows backlash in 2021 concerning alleged T&Cs changes, underscoring the fragility of confidence in WhatsApp's promises. Meta's move is clearly motivated by financial incentives. With ad revenue soar­ing—for instance, Meta reported US $160.6 billion in ad income in 2024—and WhatsApp yet to be fully monetised, the company plans to leverage its massive user base without compromising privacy guarantees. This transformation mirrors WhatsApp's evolution in Asia, where apps like WeChat serve as multifunctional ecosystems encompassing commerce, messaging, and media. Meta's vision is to expand WhatsApp's utility by integrating business and creator economy tools in non‑intrusive areas. Despite assurances, the roll‑out has sparked debate over potential shifts in user experience. Some long‑time users perceive this as a betrayal by an app founded on a minimalist, privacy‑first ethos – 'No ads! No games! No gimmicks!' as WhatsApp's founders once promised. Timid but discernible resistance emerged on social media platforms like Reddit, with a fraction of users threatening migration to platforms like Signal or Telegram. Meta is mitigating these concerns through phased deployment, global scheduling over coming months, and strict differentiation between private and monetised environments. Advertisers and business leaders, however, are optimistic: the Updates tab presents a potent venue for visibility, especially for small businesses traditionally underrepresented in mainstream ad environments. WhatsApp's approach marks its boldest commercial pivot yet, with strategic calculus focused on preserving encryption while introducing revenue‑generating mechanisms. The company's ability to maintain trust, eye potential regulatory scrutiny, and adapt to user response will determine whether this evolution strengthens WhatsApp's role as both a private messaging app and a platform for business and entertainment.

Meta to introduce ads to WhatsApp
Meta to introduce ads to WhatsApp

Tahawul Tech

time2 days ago

  • Tahawul Tech

Meta to introduce ads to WhatsApp

Meta looks to turn popular messaging platform WhatsApp into a fresh revenue stream via advertisements and paid subscriptions. The changes centre on WhatsApp's Updates tab, which hosts the app's user status feature and has 1.5 billion daily visits globally. With the latest upgrade, this section will house advertisements and commercial content separate from users' private chats. A new channel subscriptions feature will allow users to pay a monthly fee to receive exclusive updates from selected channels, such as news providers or public figures. Meanwhile, promoted channels will enable users to discover new creators, while also giving channel admins the option to boost their visibility in the commercial directory. In addition, ads shown directly in the status section will allow users to engage directly with businesses promoting products or services. In a statement, Meta emphasised that personal messages will remain ad-free and fully encrypted. The company explained that ad targeting will rely on general information such as location, language, followed channels, and user interaction with ads. For users who have linked WhatsApp with Meta's Accounts Centre, ad preferences across the company's services such as Instagram may also be used. Meta stressed that it will not sell or share phone numbers with advertisers, and personal messages, calls and group activity will remain off-limits for ad targeting. Rollout of the new tools is set to take place over the coming months. WhatsApp, acquired by Meta for $19 billion in 2014, has until now avoided traditional advertising, instead offering tools for small businesses such as shopping and digital payments. The update forms part of Meta's push diversify revenue streams as it ramps up investment in AI; the company recently committed $14.8 billion for a 49 per cent stake in AI data-labelling company Scale AI. Source: Mobile World Live Image Credit: Stock Image/Meta

WhatsApp security questioned as Israel remains the only known actor to hack it
WhatsApp security questioned as Israel remains the only known actor to hack it

The National

time3 days ago

  • The National

WhatsApp security questioned as Israel remains the only known actor to hack it

WhatsApp is facing renewed scrutiny after Iranian state media urged citizens to delete the app and alleged it was sending user data to Israel. The messaging platform, owned by US tech giant Meta, denied the claim and said it was 'concerned these false reports will be an excuse for our services to be blocked at a time when people need them the most'. 'We do not track your precise location, we don't keep logs of who everyone is messaging and we do not track the personal messages people are sending one another,' a statement said. 'We do not provide bulk information to any government.' The timing of the accusation has sparked fresh debate around WhatsApp's security, particularly given that Israel is the only country known to have successfully hacked the platform. Strong encryption? 'WhatsApp uses strong end-to-end encryption, which means only the sender and receiver can read the messages,' said Mohammad Ismail, vice president for EMEA at Cequence Security, a company that offers application programming interfaces security management. "Even WhatsApp itself can't see what's being shared." In practice, this kind of encryption is considered very secure and is trusted by security professionals around the world, he said. "However, the biggest risks usually does not come from the encryption, but from things like someone getting access to your phone or tricking you into revealing your login,' he told The National. Pegasus breach In 2019, the messaging platform filed a lawsuit against Israeli spyware company NSO Group, claiming the firm's Pegasus software had exploited a vulnerability in the app to target more than 1,400 users. Victims included journalists, human rights defenders and activists across several countries. The attack did not compromise WhatsApp's end-to-end encryption. Instead it utilised a 'zero-click' exploit, a method that enables spyware to be installed simply by sending a specially crafted message or call, which triggers the hack without the user needing to click or even see it. Once Pegasus is installed, it can bypass encryption entirely by accessing messages directly, recording calls and even activating the phone's camera and microphone without the user's knowledge, according to the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. The NSO Group says it licenses Pegasus exclusively to vetted government clients for use in counterterrorism and criminal investigations, and all foreign sales are subject to approval by the Israeli Defence Ministry. Encryption v device-level threats While WhatsApp's encryption remains intact in such cases, security experts warn encryption alone is not enough to protect against sophisticated surveillance tools. Experts say directly breaching WhatsApp encryption is extremely unlikely. 'It would take huge computing power and advanced knowledge, which even most government agencies don't have,' Mr Ismail said. 'Instead, hackers usually go after easier targets, like hacking into your phone, sending fake links, or using spyware.' Technical flaws and metadata risks Subho Halder, chief executive and co-founder of Appknox, a security platform, noted that WhatsApp's encryption protocol, the Signal Protocol, is considered the gold standard in secure messaging. 'WhatsApp's end-to-end encryption remains mathematically unbreakable with today's technology,' Mr Halder told The National. However, a recent scan of WhatsApp's latest Android build (v2.25.9.78) by Appknox uncovered several critical and high-severity implementation flaws, including insecure network configurations, hardcoded secrets and potential file access vulnerabilities. 'These don't break encryption directly, but they expose sensitive data through poor engineering practices,' he added. 'The real risk often lies not in the cryptography, but in how securely it's implemented.' He added that other vectors remain concerning. 'WhatsApp does not encrypt metadata, like who messaged whom, when and for how long, which can still be revealing even without access to the message content,' Mr Halder said. He noted that cloud backups, while now optionally encrypted, have previously posed security risks. Regional distrust The renewed concern over WhatsApp's vulnerability comes amid broader distrust in Meta in the Middle East. Last year, the firm updated its hate speech guidelines to restrict posts referencing Zionists, saying the term was frequently used in way to dehumanise Jews and Israelis. However, researchers and rights groups argue this change has led to the suppression of political speech, especially from pro-Palestinian voices. Meta has been accused of 'shadow-banning' Arabic or Palestine-related content, and Human Rights Watch documented more than 1,000 instances of post removals or demotions on Facebook and Instagram in October and November last year. Wider context in Iran Iran's call to delete WhatsApp is not unprecedented. The app was blocked during nationwide protests in 2022 following the death of Mahsa Amini in police custody. Although the ban was lifted late last year, the government maintains tight control over digital communication and platforms like WhatsApp are widely used via virtual private networks (VPNs). WhatsApp is one of Iran's most popular messaging apps, along with Instagram and Telegram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store