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Penten awards $466,840 contract to archTIS for Australian national security project

Aussie cyber technology company Penten gives archTIS the nod on a project for an unnamed Australian national security agency.

user icon David Hollingworth
Tue, 23 Apr 2024
Penten awards $466,840 contract to archTIS for Australian national security project
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Information security firm archTIS announced today (23 April) that it has signed an agreement with Australian security and applied artificial intelligence (AI) outfit Penten.

The agreement sees Penten award a contract worth nearly $500,000 to archTIS, which will provide Penten with access to archTIS’ military-grade secure document collaboration platform, Kojensi.

Kojensi will then be implemented into an unnamed Australian national security agency, giving it the ability to work with highly classified material shared between internal partners within the agency.

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“In an accelerating cyber threat environment, secure collaboration is more important than ever for our government and intelligence clients,” said Andrew Buttsworth, general manager of growth and marketing at Penten.

“We were pleased to partner with archTIS on this opportunity to leverage their best-of-breed Kojensi software within our secure AltoCrypt platform. We look forward to working together with archTIS to deliver great outcomes for this important client.”

The contract includes a yearly revenue licence fee worth $264,000, with $202,840 towards implementation services.

“We welcome the opportunity to work with Penten on this engagement and are pleased that they recognised the value of Kojensi to secure collaboration for this important client,” said Daniel Lai, managing director of archTIS.

“The use case and functionality being driven by the client opens new opportunities to work with Penten in both Australia and the UK. It is another example of archTIS’ unique value in solving sharing and collaboration of sensitive and classified information.”

David Hollingworth

David Hollingworth

David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.

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