Skip to Content Facebook Feature Image

Bedrock Security Launches Industry-First Metadata Lake to Strengthen Data Visibility, DSPM and Responsible AI Adoption

News

Bedrock Security Launches Industry-First Metadata Lake to Strengthen Data Visibility, DSPM and Responsible AI Adoption
News

News

Bedrock Security Launches Industry-First Metadata Lake to Strengthen Data Visibility, DSPM and Responsible AI Adoption

2025-03-17 21:00 Last Updated At:21:10

MENLO PARK, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 17, 2025--

Bedrock Security, the ubiquitous data security and management company, is declaring an end to data security without data visibility with the launch of its metadata lake technology — a centralized repository powering the patented Bedrock Platform. It provides continuous visibility across enterprise metadata by automatically cataloging all the data that exists, where it resides, who can access it, its level of sensitivity plus more than fifty other parameters.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250317394151/en/

According to the “2025 Enterprise Data Security Confidence Index” surveying 500+ security professionals, announced today, over half (53%) of security teams lack real-time data visibility, with most requiring days or weeks to locate sensitive data assets, increasing risk at a time when threats happen in minutes. To eliminate this challenge for data discovery and classification, data security posture management (DSPM), responsible AI and data governance, Bedrock Security also introduced three new AI-powered products: Bedrock Security Metadata Lake Copilot; AI Agents for DSPM to automate security workflows; and Bedrock Free for Snowflake, a free offering to help organizations discover and classify sensitive data. With these new solutions, organizations can now enforce enterprise-wide policies as well as prevent unauthorized data use in AI technologies, advancing Bedrock’s vision of complete data visibility and control to ensure safe data usage and responsible AI while optimizing business outcomes.

“Data growth, cloud modernization and AI adoption are making it difficult to see, manage and secure information across distributed environments,” said Bruno Kurtic, CEO and co-founder at Bedrock Security. “Our metadata lake technology eliminates blind spots by putting data at the core of security and data management. By combining scalable discovery, advanced data classification and entitlement analysis with AI-driven automation we enable organizations to unify data sensitivity, business context, lineage and usage insights. This empowers teams to adopt a proactive, data-centric posture even across complex environments so they can innovate faster without increasing risk and drive the business forward efficiently without compromising security or governance.”

Enterprises demand data-centric security and management: Introducing the Bedrock Security Metadata Lake

Security teams have outgrown traditional infrastructure protection in the face of exponential data growth, data sprawl across IaaS, PaaS and Saas, as well as explosion of new, data-hungry AI applications. The “2025 Data Security Confidence Index” shows that 82% of cybersecurity professionals report gaps in finding and classifying organizational data across production, customer and employee data stores. This is a risk organizations can no longer accept as AI technologies become table stakes for modern businesses.

“Bedrock Security’s approach addresses a fundamental challenge we see in the market – Enterprise Strategy Group research shows that organizations are increasingly prioritizing DSPM solutions as they grapple with sensitive data growth proliferating across diverse environments, particularly with AI adoption,” said Todd Thiemann, senior analyst, IAM and data security at Enterprise Strategy Group. “By shifting from infrastructure protection to data-aware security, organizations can better prioritize risks and remediate based on actual sensitivity and leverage information while maintaining appropriate safeguards. This practical approach strengthens existing security investments with essential context that has been lacking.”

The Bedrock Platform tackles these challenges through its core innovation: the Bedrock Metadata Lake technology. This dynamic repository, powered by a graph backend, catalogs and connects all enterprise data stores across SaaS, PaaS and IaaS environments, providing continuous insights into location, sensitivity, entitlements, lineage, usage and risk. The “2025 Data Security Confidence Index” found that 88% of respondents said an automated metadata lake would be “critical” or “very valuable” to solving their data visibility issues.

“The fact that Bedrock can accurately and quickly surface relevant events and security concerns is the biggest win for Strive Health,” said Gabe Stapleton, vice president, security and enterprise technology, and CISO at Strive Health. “Bedrock’s Metadata Lake and Copilot technology makes it easy for us to see who has access to what data and watch where that data is moving to and from in our environment. Bedrock’s high-quality data discovery allows us to quickly identify and classify sensitive information, ensuring we have complete visibility into our data landscape. Its ability to detect plain text secrets helps us prevent accidental exposure of credentials and other critical information. The platform also excels at external sharing discovery, giving us clear insights into where our data is being shared outside our organization. Additionally, Bedrock enables us to pare down permissions efficiently, reducing unnecessary access and strengthening our security posture. These capabilities provide immense value in maintaining a secure, compliant, and well-governed environment.”

Unlike static data catalogs or siloed tools, Bedrock Security uses AI and cloud-scale architecture to automatically discover, classify and gather other data risk context, continuously expanding knowledge in the metadata lake. When integrated with security tools such as SIEMs, CNAPPs and DLPs, it helps prioritize critical risks, target vulnerabilities exposing sensitive assets and improve incident response. Bedrock’s Metadata Lake Platform with an API-first approach empowers teams to implement uniform policies across heterogeneous enterprise infrastructure, detect sensitive data used in AI initiatives, enable least-privilege access and rapidly innovate while reducing risk. Through Bedrock Security’s proprietary serverless architecture and Adaptive Scanning technology, organizations can maintain continuous visibility of their sensitive data across hundreds of petabytes without the high operational costs typically associated with legacy solutions.

“Organizations often struggle with AI adoption because they lack clear visibility into their data, directly hindering their ability to achieve meaningful business outcomes,” said Chirag Mehta, vice president and principal analyst at Constellation Research. “By addressing the disconnect between data and its critical metadata context, companies can significantly enhance their security posture and overcome one of the key barriers to effective and secure AI implementation.”

New AI-powered tools simplify data discovery, classification and governance

Bedrock Security has expanded its platform with new capabilities plus a free edition to help enterprises identify, understand and ultimately protect their data while maximizing its value.

“All enterprise security ostensibly exists to protect data, yet traditional methods focus on perimeters, networks and endpoints, largely ignoring data because of its exponential growth and rate of change,” added Kurtic. “Cloud adoption, agile development and microservices — now compounded by exploding AI adoption — have triggered a surge in complexity and an ever-accelerating pace of transformation in both data ecosystem and business processes. It’s clear we need a new paradigm: the only way to safeguard enterprise data is to find, understand and protect the data itself. While conventional security solutions remain relevant, Bedrock delivers a petabyte-scale data security solution, including DSPM, and enhances existing security tools by injecting them with rich data sensitivity context, ensuring organizations can secure and manage their information effectively in a rapidly changing environment.”

Availability

Resources

About Bedrock Security

Bedrock Security, the ubiquitous data security and management company, accelerates enterprises' ability to harness data as a strategic asset while minimizing risk. Its industry-first metadata lake technology and AI-driven automation enable continuous visibility into data location, sensitivity, access and usage across distributed environments. Bedrock’s platform continuously catalogs data, enabling security, governance and data teams to proactively identify risks, enforce policies and optimize data usage — without disrupting operations or driving up costs. Trusted by leading financial institutions, healthcare providers and Fortune 1000 companies, Bedrock Security empowers organizations to improve data security posture management (DSPM), confidently deliver responsible AI initiatives and manage exponential data growth. Headquartered in Silicon Valley and backed by Greylock, the company is led by experts in cloud, GenAI cybersecurity and data storage. Learn more at www.bedrocksecurity.com.

With the Bedrock Metadata Lake Copilot, data security, governance and data management teams can interact with their metadata lake and quickly get results for complex data queries.

With the Bedrock Metadata Lake Copilot, data security, governance and data management teams can interact with their metadata lake and quickly get results for complex data queries.

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Coco Gauff shrugged her right shoulder and chuckled a bit Monday at the notion that she seems to elicit concern from others when she goes through a two- or three-match losing streak — a rough patch in the course of a long season.

“Sometimes when I don’t do well, people think there’s something personally wrong with me,” Gauff said on the eve of the Miami Open, where the women begin main-draw play on Tuesday and the men get started Wednesday.

Bow out early at one event or two — or drop a trio of outings consecutively, as she did at the Australian Open, Qatar and Dubai in January and February — and fans or former players will ask the 2023 U.S. Open champion, who just turned 21 last week, whether she's OK.

“I'm like, ‘I just lost a couple of matches! I’m chillin’,’” said Gauff, who has a first-round bye because she is seeded No. 3 at the hard-court Masters 1000 event and will get started by taking on another past Grand Slam champion — Petra Kvitova or Sofia Kenin — in the second round later in the week.

“I'm obviously not happy with those past results, but it's one of those things that, in the history of my career, I've had ups and downs. I still feel like I have a couple more years ... (to reach) that point where every week is a great week, I guess,” said Gauff, who is based not far from where the Miami Open is played. “I'm also in the middle of changes in my game; it's been difficult."

She's spoken frequently about those switches, which began with adjusting her coaching staff after last year's U.S. Open and also included adapting her serve — with a particular eye on shoring up second serves so as to avoid double-fault issues — and her forehand.

It's been clear ever since she burst onto the scene as a 15-year-old qualifier at Wimbledon in 2019, beating seven-time major champion Venus Williams along the way to reaching the fourth round, that Gauff's backhand is nothing if not elite, while her forehand is the shot that opponents tend to go after.

The American's most recent match was a three-set loss to Tokyo Olympics gold medalist Belinda Bencic at Indian Wells, California, in the fourth round last week. Afterward, Bencic spoke about what her thinking was at 4-all in the final set.

“I felt like she was more tense,” Bencic said about Gauff, “so I felt like that was the right time to go for her forehand.”

Gauff called the event held over the next two weeks at the stadium used by the NFL's Miami Dolphins as her “home tournament.”

She's 6-5 in Miami and has not made it beyond the fourth round there.

No matter what others might say to her, or about her, after setbacks, Gauff doesn't like to harp on it too much — even if she expects more from herself, too.

That's what comes with being ranked as highly as she is. And with having won Grand Slam titles in singles and doubles, along with the season-ending WTA Finals last year.

“I will say that it is tough, sometimes, when everyone is (saying), 'Oh, (lost) two matches in a row,’ and things like that,” she said Monday. "Because if I wasn’t a top-five player it wouldn’t, probably, be a conversation. That comes with being at the top. You’re expected to win. And I expect myself to win, as well.”

FILE - Coco Gauff, of the United States, holds up the championship trophy after defeating Aryna Sabalenka, of Belarus, in the women's singles final of the U.S. Open tennis championships, Sept. 9, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, file)

FILE - Coco Gauff, of the United States, holds up the championship trophy after defeating Aryna Sabalenka, of Belarus, in the women's singles final of the U.S. Open tennis championships, Sept. 9, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, file)

FILE - Coco Gauff of the United States returns a shot to Yuliia Starodubtseva of Ukraine during the women's singles quarterfinals match of the China Open tennis tournament, at the National Tennis Center in Beijing, Oct. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim, file)

FILE - Coco Gauff of the United States returns a shot to Yuliia Starodubtseva of Ukraine during the women's singles quarterfinals match of the China Open tennis tournament, at the National Tennis Center in Beijing, Oct. 3, 2024. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim, file)

Recommended Articles
Hot · Posts