At industry events, Fortinet reaffirms commitment to Saudi security

The OT Secure Talks event featured industry leaders discussing the impact of digital transformation on industrial environments.
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Updated 09 October 2023
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At industry events, Fortinet reaffirms commitment to Saudi security

Fortinet, a global cybersecurity leader driving the convergence of networking and security, has reinforced its commitment to the Saudi market at its annual “Security Day” in Riyadh, showcasing strong momentum across key verticals and announcing the availability of its full suite of services locally.

Held at Fairmont Riyadh last month, Security Day is the largest and most comprehensive in-person security event in the Kingdom. Attended by more than 500 people, including Fortinet executives, industry experts, and customers and partners, the event expanded on the concepts of convergence and consolidation to provide comprehensive cybersecurity protection for all users, devices, and applications across all network edges. Attendees were given a firsthand look into cybersecurity issues that are impacting industries across the region.

With its full suite of services now available in the region, such as sales, pre-sales, post-sales, incident response, business operations and localized technical assistance center support, Fortinet has strengthened its ability to service its Saudi customers and partners across numerous industries, including enterprise, commercial, service provider, public sector, and financial services.

Furthermore, Fortinet is expanding its market-leading SASE, OT security, and cloud security offerings. The company hosted a dedicated OT event on Oct. 4 for more than 150 customers and partners. The OT Secure Talks event featured industry leaders discussing the impact of digital transformation on industrial environments, including global security best practices for OT.

Saudi Arabia relies heavily on critical infrastructure such as oil and gas facilities, power plants, water treatment facilities, smart cities, and transportation systems for economic stability and growth. The OT systems used to operate these industrial environments, if impacted by a security breach, can have a significant impact on the country’s economy and well-being. Fortinet’s OT-aware Security Fabric offers purpose-built solutions to help safeguard critical infrastructure in the region.

Sami AlShwairakh, senior regional director, Fortinet Saudi Arabia, said: “Amidst a landscape of increasingly sophisticated threats and a global skills gap, we’re looking forward to empowering local talents, providing cutting-edge cybersecurity solutions, and fostering innovation that will play a pivotal role in securing the Kingdom’s digital transformation journey.”

Fortinet continues to see strong momentum in the Saudi market and has an ongoing commitment to supporting Saudi companies of all sizes and across all industries as they accelerate in these areas.”

Fortinet has launched several initiatives to support Vision 2030, including advancing its efforts to close the cybersecurity skills gap and address the local talent shortage by developing a program for recent graduates. The company has also signed agreements with universities and other local academic institutions as part of the Academic Partner Program, providing Fortinet Training Institute certification curriculum to Saudi students as they prepare for a career in cybersecurity and to help build the country’s workforce of the future.


Cisco drives Kingdom’s secure expansion into AI-driven, cloud-first future

Updated 21 December 2025
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Cisco drives Kingdom’s secure expansion into AI-driven, cloud-first future

With local infrastructure investment, AI-ready data centers and diverse strategic partnerships, Cisco is supporting the Kingdom’s secure expansion into an AI-driven, cloud-first future. 

Fady Younes, managing director for cybersecurity at Cisco for the Middle East, Africa, Türkiye, Romania and CIS, said that Saudi Arabia is adopting AI at a pace faster than the global average, according to Cisco’s Cybersecurity Readiness Index and AI Readiness Index. Still, while this rapid uptake is driving efficiency and innovation, it also introduces new AI-related risks that organizations must address early, he said. This underscores the critical importance of embedding security into every digital and AI initiative from the outset to ensure safe and sustainable growth.

A key pillar of Cisco’s strategy in Saudi Arabia, according to Younes, is local infrastructure investment. Cisco has established fully operational data centers in the Kingdom to deliver cloud-based security services and the Webex collaboration platform, with plans to launch a dedicated Meraki cloud region. Localizing these services, he said, supports national data-sovereignty requirements, strengthens regulatory compliance, and reduces latency, enabling faster AI-driven threat detection and response.

Younes also pointed to Cisco’s partnership with AMD and HUMAIN, a PIF company. This joint venture, set to launch in 2026, will combine advanced data centers with Cisco and AMD technologies to provide efficient, cost-effective infrastructure and develop up to 1 GW of AI capacity by 2030. He described the initiative as a strong example of how global technology expertise and local ambition can align to support the Kingdom’s long-term AI goals.

Discussing the growing demand for AI-ready data centers, Younes highlighted Cisco’s role in modernizing traditional environments into unified, high-performance platforms. This includes Secure AI Factory architectures with scalable AI PODs and embedded security, private and hybrid cloud models that preserve data sovereignty, GPU-optimized compute powered by low-latency Silicon One networking, and unified management through platforms such as Intersight and Nexus Dashboard. All these capabilities, combined with strategic partnerships with companies like NVIDIA, give Saudi organizations the resilience and scalability needed to run large-scale AI workloads with confidence.

On the cybersecurity front, Younes explained that AI now sits at the core of how threats are detected and contained. By applying AI across the security stack, Cisco can identify patterns that human analysts would miss, correlate signals across networks, endpoints, and cloud environments, and automate large parts of responses at speed. This approach is fundamental in the Middle East, where rapid digitization has expanded attack surfaces and introduced risks like shadow AI and fragmented security tools.

Platforms such as Cisco’s AI Defense, he said, are designed to protect AI models and applications themselves, while also strengthening overall detection and response. Identity has also become the primary target in modern attacks, so Cisco’s AI-driven tools protect user identities, authentication flows, and access behaviors across hybrid environments. Combined with capabilities like Hybrid Mesh Firewall and Universal Zero Trust Network Access, these technologies are delivered through the Cisco Security Cloud, enabling Middle East organizations to respond faster, simplify operations, and stay ahead of increasingly AI-driven threats.

Beyond technology, Younes stressed that building a skilled local workforce is essential to sustaining Saudi Arabia’s digital momentum. Cisco works closely with universities, government entities, and telecom partners to develop talent equipped for AI-enabled, cloud-centric networks. To date, more than 480,000 learners in Saudi Arabia have been trained through the Cisco Networking Academy, with women accounting for 36 percent of participants. Cisco has also committed to providing free digital upskilling for 500,000 learners in the Kingdom over the next five years across AI, cybersecurity, data science, and programming.

He added that Cisco is placing growing emphasis on AI-security literacy, helping learners and professionals understand emerging risks such as data exposure, shadow AI, and identity-based attacks. To further advance AI research and development, Cisco and King Abdullah University of Science and Technology announced the launch of a new AI Institute, focusing on applied research in areas ranging from AI-native communication systems and advanced edge infrastructure for Industry 5.0 to AI-driven solutions for critical sectors such as water, energy, food, and healthcare.

Looking ahead, Younes believes that the most significant security priorities for Saudi organizations over the next five years will shift toward protecting far more dynamic, distributed, and automated environments. One of the biggest needs will revolve around securing AI systems themselves, not just the data they use, but the models, applications, and pipelines that drive new digital services. As cyberattackers increasingly use AI to scale their operations, organizations will also need defenses that operate at machine speed and can automatically correlate signals across networks, users, and cloud workloads.

Fragmented security architectures will be another challenge as companies modernize and move deeper into hybrid and multicloud environments. Cisco’s integrated approach, bringing networking and security together through the Cisco Security Cloud, is designed to address this challenge, Younes said. By simplifying complex hybrid and multicloud environments and supporting zero-trust security across AI workloads, Cisco aims to help Saudi organizations innovate securely and confidently as they embrace AI at scale.

Finally, there is the long-term workforce element. As networks become more cloud-centric, Saudi organizations will need talent that understands both AI and cybersecurity. Cisco’s partnerships across the Kingdom, from enterprise collaborations to skills programs, are designed to help build that capability so organizations can innovate confidently at scale.