March 28, 2024
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Shine Keeps Mobile Devices Happy and Virus-Free

While they won’t say it to the media, most security technology startups in Israel have a link to Israel’s version of the CIA, Unit 8200. But Ron Porat, who founded the anti-virus company Shine (www.getshine.com), comes from a modest background as a technician in the Israeli Air Force. Once a teenage gaming hacker, he became a professional archeologist after military service.

Seven years of digging through layers of dirt led to a sad paycheck that wouldn’t support a growing family. So Porat, now 44 with three kids, went back to the traditional workforce as a programmer and worked his way to the top.

“I decided to make a turnaround in my life and start from scratch—I knew how to program and hack, and I began as a programmer and went up the hill until I had the startup and a high-tech exit,” he said.

Now on his third startup as the CEO of Shine, Porat is building a promising mobile and PC security company out of Herzylia, Israel. Shine is designed to detect and stop viruses and malware real-time on any device. Hopeful buyers have offered him and his co-founders millions for the year-old company with 24 employees, but they are not selling. “One of the three [big] anti-virus companies gave us an offer of eight digits after we founded the company, and we said ‘no.’ We are going into this from the bottom of our hearts. This is our calling. We need to help people. This is the ultimate threat of the future and we want to generate a huge company that will go head to head with all the big ones.”

What’s the problem in today’s arena? Porat says that mobile devices and smart “everythings” are virtually open to attack. Anti-virus companies are still focusing on PCs rather than tablets and mobile phones.

“There are very common viruses on the phone, and they are starting to be more common,” Porat explained. “They can steal information and send a costly SMS from your phone to get money from advertisers. They forward your contact list to the cloud and use it for spam. They can steal pictures and your contact list.”

These viruses can even open the mic and camera of your device, without your knowledge, in order to spy on you. They can hack into a car’s computer system while it’s in drive mode; they can hack into smart homes, government files, just about anything––as Edward Snowden demonstrated with Prism.

Shine hopes to swoop in and save the day via an artificial intelligence solution different from the virus signatures used by anti-virus companies.

The program “learns” what is normal on a device, as opposed to events that seem malicious. Working in real time, the software constantly updates itself, pulling information from the cloud or from users attached to the “hive” but does not collect private information, Porat promises.

Your device is protected when you see a sunflower and sunshine. When it may be under threat, Shine alerts users by showing cloudy weather.

Then you can decide whether to go ahead and unlock the software or fix the damage that has been done. There are no costly fees or slow loading times as Shine does its background checks. For everyday users, Shine is free.

Porat emphasized: “We are not profiling users or using private behavioral information of users. It works in the same way that I teach my kids how to cross the road. I am teaching them the basic ideas: to look right, left and right again.”

The same kind of “supervised learning” goes on in Shine’s program with the help of a proprietary algorithm that recognizes good and bad in the space of malware.

“Anti-virus software is a real hassle along with the messages they throw you, which are confusing,” said Porat. “Basically we have put several game-changing ideas into the program.”

The free download software lives on your smartphone, tablet or Android device (with a PC and OS version out soon).

The company plans to make its money with solutions for enterprise. Let’s say a sales force from the United States has gone to the Philippines to a trade show, and all their smartphones are attacked by a virus while there. Shine, which will unveil this solution next year, will be able to track down who was contaminated first, where the virus spread and how much damage was done. In theory, Shine could protect a fleet of phones, tablets and PCs from external attacks, Porat says. And, unlike any device or back-up solution known today, Shine can roll back the damage caused while leaving other updated data intact.

Shine is sailing smoothly toward sunny skies with a $3 million investment from the VCs Horizons Venture and Initial Capital.

By Karin Kloosterman Israel 21C

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