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Cybersecurity
13:26, 20 November 2025
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Identity Protection: Indeed Unveils the First Public Version of Indeed ITDR

Russian cybersecurity firm Indeed has released the first public version of Indeed ITDR 2.0, an identity threat detection and response platform designed to counter credential compromise in real time.

Reducing Dependence on Western Technologies

Indeed ITDR is positioned as Russia’s first full‑scale Identity Threat Detection & Response solution capable not only of detecting identity‑based attacks but also interrupting them in real time. The platform monitors user and service account activity, analyzes network interactions, detects anomalies, and blocks suspicious operations.

It also supports multi‑factor authentication without installing agents on devices. Amid rising credential‑focused attacks and increasing regulatory pressure around identity protection, a domestic platform strengthens Russia’s cyber‑sovereignty and reduces reliance on foreign security vendors.

While the initial focus is domestic, the underlying concept of identity protection gives the platform export potential. For citizens, such tools mean fewer credential leaks, reduced fraud risks, and a stronger security posture across digital services.

For the country, the launch reflects the strengthening of local cybersecurity engineering and a step toward technological independence.

“A key advantage of Indeed ITDR is that it implements two critical capabilities at once — detection and response. This allows the platform not only to register incidents but also to prevent their development at early stages. The product provides security teams with tools for monitoring, analysis, and threat response, helping build a resilient identity‑security system.”
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Designed for Large‑Scale Infrastructures

As a homegrown solution, Indeed ITDR has potential appeal for countries seeking local cybersecurity products under sanctions or geopolitical constraints. With the required certifications (GOST, FSTEC and others), the platform could find demand in the CIS and Greater Eurasia.

Domestically, demand is rising as financial institutions, industrial firms, and government agencies seek tools to detect identity‑centric attacks across Kerberos, LDAP and other authentication systems. Integration with Indeed’s ecosystem — PAM, AM, CM — expands capabilities for access, privilege, and certificate management, forming a unified security platform.

Risks remain: the product is still in public release, the market is competitive, and success depends on real‑world deployments and customer feedback.

Indicators of Market Maturity

The ITDR segment is emerging in Russia, giving developers room to shape the market. The release strengthens Russia’s independence from foreign tools and aligns with national priorities around technological sovereignty.

Over the next one to two years, Indeed will likely target major deployments in finance, industry, the public sector, and the energy domain. With product maturity and successful certification, Indeed ITDR could be exported to CIS countries and developing markets seeking non‑Western cybersecurity alternatives.

The project still faces challenges: intense competition, the need to demonstrate reliability at scale, and the requirement to adapt to sector‑specific security demands. In three to four years, ITDR systems may become standard components of enterprise defense, and Indeed could secure a leading position in Russia’s identity‑security market.

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