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Resecurity and D4DS Partner to Accelerate Advanced Cybersecurity Capabilities in Saudi Arabia

Business

Resecurity and D4DS Partner to Accelerate Advanced Cybersecurity Capabilities in Saudi Arabia
Business

Business

Resecurity and D4DS Partner to Accelerate Advanced Cybersecurity Capabilities in Saudi Arabia

2026-01-04 12:06 Last Updated At:13:16

LOS ANGELES & RIYADH, Saudi Arabia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan 3, 2026--

Resecurity (USA) has announced a strategic partnership with D4DS (Data & Decision Support Consulting in the Field of Telecommunications and Information Technology), the leading management consulting company headquartered in Riyadh, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), and focusing on enabling a data-driven culture to transform businesses into data-centric organizations.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260103587861/en/

The partnership aims to accelerate the delivery of intelligence-driven cybersecurity solutions, facilitate data protection compliance, and strengthen resilience against evolving cyber threats and new security challenges, while advancing digital transformation initiatives aligned with the key priorities of Vision 2030.

Strengthening Cyber Defense Through Collaboration

As Saudi Arabia continues to expand its digital infrastructure across government, financial services, energy, and enterprise sectors, organizations face increasingly complex threat environments. The collaboration between Resecurity and D4DS brings together global threat intelligence expertise and local operational capabilities, enabling customers to adopt more proactive and intelligence-led security strategies.

Accelerating Cybersecurity Offerings for the Kingdom

The partnership focuses on enabling Saudi organizations to benefit from advanced cybersecurity capabilities that align with national priorities around data protection, operational resilience, and digital trust. By combining Resecurity’s threat intelligence platforms and analytical insight with D4DS’s regional presence and service delivery expertise, the collaboration supports faster adoption of modern security frameworks tailored to the Kingdom’s regulatory and operational landscape.

Supporting Secure Digital Transformation

The partnership reflects a shared commitment to advancing secure innovation in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Together, Resecurity and D4DS will support customers across multiple sectors with services designed to address cyber fraud, identity-based attacks, external threat exposure, and complex incident scenarios.

By enabling closer collaboration between global intelligence providers and local cybersecurity specialists, the partnership contributes to building a more resilient and trusted digital ecosystem that supports long-term economic growth and national cybersecurity objectives.

About Resecurity

Resecurity ® is a cybersecurity company that delivers a unified platform for endpoint protection, fraud prevention, risk management, and cyber threat intelligence. Known for providing best-of-breed data-driven intelligence solutions, Resecurity's services and platforms focus on early-warning identification of data breaches and comprehensive protection against cybersecurity risks. Founded in 2016, Resecurity has been globally recognized as one of the world's most innovative cybersecurity companies with the sole mission of enabling organizations to combat cyber threats regardless of how sophisticated they are. Most recently, Resecurity was named one of the Top 10 fastest-growing private cybersecurity companies in Los Angeles, California by Inc. Magazine. Resecurity is an Official Partner of the Cybercrime Atlas by the World Economic Forum (WEF) and a member of InfraGard National Members Alliance (INMA), AFCEA, NDIA, SIA, FS-ISAC, and the American Chamber of Commerce in Saudi Arabia (AmChamKSA), Singapore (AmChamSG), Korea (AmChamKorea), Mexico (AmChamMX), Thailand (AmChamThailand), and the UAE (AmChamDubai). To learn more, visit https://resecurity.com.

About D4DS

D4DS is a management consulting firm headquartered in Riyadh (the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia), specializing in enabling data-driven transformation for organizations across the public and private sectors. The company focuses on helping enterprises evolve into data-centric organizations by aligning strategy, technology, and people to unlock the value of data at scale. Known for its forward-thinking and people-centered approach, D4DS combines consulting expertise with practical execution to support digital transformation initiatives, analytics adoption, and organizational change. Its multidisciplinary teams work closely with clients to design modern operating models, strengthen decision-making capabilities, and prepare organizations for long-term growth in an increasingly data-driven economy. By fostering a culture of innovation and openness to new ideas, D4DS supports Saudi organizations in building resilient, future-ready capabilities aligned with national digital transformation objectives. Website: www.d4ds.net

Resecurity and D4DS Partner to Accelerate Advanced Cybersecurity Capabilities in Saudi Arabia

Resecurity and D4DS Partner to Accelerate Advanced Cybersecurity Capabilities in Saudi Arabia

WASHINGTON (AP) — After Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth cut nine Navy officers, including all the women, from a promotion list, several female officers say they see the unusual intervention as a sign that their careers now have a ceiling and worry for the future generation of female military leaders.

The Navy had selected 31 sailors to promote from the rank of captain to one-star admiral, but Hegseth recently intervened to strike nine people from the list, including three women and two Black men, according to a defense official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss information not permitted to be released publicly.

As a result, the Navy is not promoting a single woman to the one-star admiral rank this year even though women make up about one-quarter of all Navy officers and nearly one-third of the sea service's midgrade ranks, according to military data from 2024.

The Associated Press spoke with eight female Navy officers of varying ranks and time in service after Hegseth's cuts, which were reported earlier by The New York Times, became public. They spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of retribution from their superiors.

The more junior officers said they saw the development as a sign that their careers would become politicized if they rose too far in the ranks, and some said they felt they now had a limit on how far they could be promoted. Some said it made them feel less valued within the military and wondered whether that wasn't part of the intent.

The Pentagon has not offered any rationale on why the women, or any of the other six people, were removed from the promotion list.

Sean Parnell, the Pentagon's top spokesman, said on social media this week that “military promotions are given to those who have earned them” and that the Pentagon “will never consider the color of a service member’s skin or their gender as a factor in promotions." The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request seeking further comment.

The Navy's process for choosing which officers to promote to the one-star rank has been relatively constant and transparent over the years. The service convenes a group of officers, called a promotion board, that examines the records of eligible officers and chooses the most qualified.

The board that selected the initial slate of 31 officers for promotion was directed by then-Navy Secretary John Phelan, an appointee of President Donald Trump, to “recommend for promotion the best qualified officers within their respective competitive category.”

The order from Phelan, who later abruptly departed his post in April, said the board should consider an officer's performance, competence and character, among other traits, as part of those qualifications.

It also said that given China's prominence in the Trump administration's National Defense Strategy, “special consideration shall be given to officers who have excelled in their knowledge of the political military affairs and U.S. strategic interests in the Indo-Pacific region, and operational contingency planning for Indo-Pacific war plans.”

Hegseth has long argued, without offering evidence, that women in the military benefit from preferential treatment and are not suited for combat roles.

"For too long, we’ve promoted too many uniformed leaders for the wrong reasons based on their race, based on gender quotas, based on historic so-called firsts,” Hegseth told hundreds of military leaders in September.

The approach, he asserted, made the Pentagon “less capable and less lethal.”

Phelan's order said the Navy cannot discriminate based on criteria such as race and sex, and it specifically noted that “this guidance shall not be interpreted as requiring or permitting preferential treatment of any officer or group of officers on the grounds of race, religion, color, sex.”

The full list of 31 people to be promoted was approved by Phelan, other Navy leaders and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, before it reached Hegseth, who chose to make the changes, the defense official said.

While Hegseth is within his rights to intervene in the list, “it’s just not the norm” and its “a break from tradition” said Katherine Kuzminski, a researcher specializing in military recruiting and retention at the Center for New American Security think tank. She said that promotions historically have been seen “the services’ business.”

Kuzminski noted that “this is a decision that’s not being made by the U.S. Navy — it’s being made by the secretary of defense” and said Hegseth's growing interference in operational aspects of the military services such as promotions is creating “tension" about what “normal” will look like going forward.

Some of the more senior Navy officers who spoke with the AP expressed concerns about the message it sends to the next generation of young sailors.

In addition to pulling the recent promotions of three women to admiral, Hegseth shortly after he took office fired Adm. Lisa Franchetti, the service's top officer and the first woman to hold the job. He never explained his rationale.

Since then, he also has fired two other female three-star admirals without explanation.

Some of the officers who spoke to the AP said that while they were encouraging female sailors to stick with the Navy, they acknowledged that message is coming at a difficult time.

Kuzminski said the rhetoric and actions surrounding women in the military “affects individual service member decision-making and it also affects family unit decision-making,” including whether people make a career of the military.

Kuzminski said that following the monthslong hold on military promotions by Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., during the Biden administration, surveys showed that partisan politics spilling into the day-to-day lives of troops affected their decision-making.

One officer said this impact was not confined to women.

In conversations with other sailors in her unit, she said that male sailors were hesitant to deal with what appears to be a growing politicization of simply following the orders of previous administrations.

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivers his address during the Shangri-La Dialogue, Asia's annual defense and security forum, in Singapore, Saturday, May 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)

U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth delivers his address during the Shangri-La Dialogue, Asia's annual defense and security forum, in Singapore, Saturday, May 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)

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