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Cybersecurity
10:01, 09 June 2026
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BeelineCloud Launches Vulnerability Management Service

At the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, Beeline Cloud unveiled a continuous vulnerability-scanning and management service. The platform, called Cloud Vulnerability Management, is built on the Russian-developed ScanFactory solution. It combines more than 20 specialized scanning engines and includes an AI assistant that analyzes threats and generates remediation guidance. The service also incorporates OSINT modules, leaked-password monitoring, SSL certificate validation, and integration with the FSTEC Vulnerability Database.

Beeline Cloud has developed not a mass-market product but a tool aimed at enterprise customers, including banks, retailers, industrial companies, telecommunications providers, government agencies, cloud-service operators, and organizations with hybrid infrastructure. As cyber threats continue to intensify, Russia’s vulnerability-management market is expanding. The trend is being driven both by import-substitution efforts and by growing regulatory requirements. Vulnerability management has become a core cybersecurity process, and the number of Russian VM solutions continues to increase.

The reliability of digital services is expected to improve. The faster critical vulnerabilities are remediated, the lower the risk of data breaches affecting banking applications, online retailers, telecommunications services, healthcare systems, government platforms, and enterprise environments. The introduction of Cloud Vulnerability Management is also expected to strengthen technological sovereignty in cybersecurity. Built on ScanFactory, the platform integrates with the FSTEC Vulnerability Database and aligns with domestic regulatory requirements. Its arrival reduces reliance on foreign cybersecurity tools.

Integrations and Outlook

Within Russia, the BeelineCloud platform appears well positioned for growth. As early as 2023, FSTEC formally established vulnerability management as a standalone cybersecurity process and designated the FSTEC Vulnerability Database as the official source of threat intelligence. Demand for such products is being reinforced by broader import-substitution efforts and stricter regulatory expectations. According to T1, the Russian cybersecurity market could grow by approximately 12% in 2026.

For many organizations, cloud-based VM services are more convenient and less expensive than maintaining dedicated platforms and in-house teams, making the Security-as-a-Service model increasingly attractive. Integration with SOCs (security operations centers), DevSecOps pipelines, and EASM (external attack surface management) platforms is also becoming important. Industry examples already demonstrate the adoption of end-to-end security architectures and greater automation of cybersecurity processes.

As for international demand, Russian cybersecurity products could attract interest from friendly countries, provided they obtain the necessary certifications, localization, trust relationships, and partner networks.

Growth of the Russian Market

In 2022, Rostelecom-Solar launched a cloud-based vulnerability-monitoring service built on Rostelecom infrastructure and the RedCheck scanner. The offering targeted medium-sized and large enterprises. In 2023, Sber introduced the Sber X-TI platform, which included a database of 280,000 vulnerabilities for comprehensive vulnerability management. In 2024, MaxPatrol VM was added to a domestic software compatibility catalog, an important step for government-sector adoption. In 2025, T1 Oblako and SolidLab brought an intelligent SecaaS platform with full-cycle vulnerability management capabilities to market.

By 2025-2026, the Russian VM market had become highly competitive. According to Anti-Malware.ru, the sector includes Alpha Sense Symbiote, MaxPatrol VM, R-Vision VM, ScanFactory VM, SecurityVision VM, and Vulns.io VM, while adjacent segments such as scanners, EASM platforms, and BAS solutions continue to grow.

Rising Demand and Competition Among Vendors

The launch of Beeline Cloud’s Cloud Vulnerability Management service marks another step toward comprehensive cloud cybersecurity. The company has introduced a managed vulnerability-management environment that combines AI-driven analytics, dashboards, and integration with the FSTEC Vulnerability Database. That approach allows organizations to monitor both their external attack surface and internal infrastructure.

Demand for these platforms is expected to increase as the window between vulnerability disclosure and active exploitation continues to shrink, pushing organizations away from periodic assessments and toward continuous monitoring. Experts also expect closer integration among VM services, SOC platforms, EASM tools, and DevSecOps workflows to improve risk prioritization and automate remediation tasks. Competition with Russian cybersecurity vendors such as Positive Technologies is likely to intensify. At the same time, regulatory requirements and import-substitution policies are making domestic VM platforms an increasingly essential component of mature security architectures, particularly in government organizations and critical infrastructure sectors.

“[The launch of] Cloud Vulnerability Management gives customers more than a tool for identifying vulnerabilities. It provides a full situational-awareness center. Through deep automation, the combined capabilities of more than 20 scanning engines, and AI-driven analytics, the platform reduces routine workloads for cybersecurity teams and enables organizations to eliminate critical vulnerabilities before attackers can exploit them
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