Salt Security, the leading API security company, announced that Berkshire Bank, a leading socially responsible community bank with office locations in New England and New York, has selected the Salt Security API Protection Platform to secure its growing ecosystem of APIs. The Salt platform enables Berkshire Bank to reduce business risk by shielding itself, its partners, and its customers from rising API-based cybersecurity threats, while augmenting the company’s zero trust security model.
Berkshire Bank joins a growing number of financial services institutions that have chosen Salt Security to secure their and their customers’ critical data, including Ally Bank, Apiture, City National Bank, and Finastra, among others.
“As a business enabler that supports multiple Fintech partnerships, Berkshire Bank wants to bring innovative and convenient financial offerings to market as quickly as possible. However, we will never do so at the expense of our customers’ security,” said Ryan Melle, SVP, Chief Information Security Officer, Berkshire Bank. “Salt Security makes it easy for us to mitigate the risk of API-based exposure when storing and sharing information online about our customers’ financial data. We looked at other solutions but only Salt had the full range of capabilities we wanted – complete API visibility, protection across build and runtime, and seamless integration into every facet of our API ecosystem.”
Also Read: InsightRX Helps Boone County Hospital Improve Patient Safety with Precision Dosing
Digital transformation, mobilization, cloud migration, and application modernization represent the new technology frontier for financial services, and APIs are the delivery vehicle to get there.
However, APIs have also become the number one attack vector for applications today. According to the Salt Security State of API Report, Q1 2022, API attacks rose 681% in 2021, compared to a 321% increase in overall API traffic during the same period.
“Berkshire Bank, like many of our customers, has begun to rely more heavily on APIs to drive and support new digital business initiatives,” said Roey Eliyahu, co-founder and CEO, Salt Security. “Bad actors have also zeroed-in on the valuable information that APIs hold. The industry has quickly realized that today’s solutions, such as web application firewalls (WAFs) and API gateways, fail to defend against API threats. Even solutions supposedly designed for API security lack the context needed to identify API attacks in the wild. Only Salt applies cloud-scale big data to the challenge, providing the context needed to identify API attacks, which often unfold over days, weeks, and even months.”