Remedio Expands into OT and IIoT
Diving deeper into
Remedio
Remedio can expand its dependency-aware remediation engine to operational technology controllers, industrial IoT devices, and smart manufacturing equipment.
Analyzed 5 sources
Reviewing context
This points to Remedio’s biggest expansion path, moving from fixing employee laptops and servers to fixing the machines that actually run factories. The core idea is the same. Find insecure settings, understand what each device depends on, push safe changes, and roll them back fast if something breaks. In OT and industrial IoT, that workflow matters more because many devices are old, fragile, and too numerous to harden by hand.
-
The natural wedge is not broad OT monitoring, it is remediation after visibility. OT security leaders like Armis, Claroty, and Nozomi built their positions by first discovering unmanaged assets and mapping industrial protocols. Remedio fits one step later in the workflow, turning known misconfigurations into automated fixes with rollback and policy enforcement.
-
The product mechanics already line up with industrial buying requirements. Remedio supports on premises and air gapped deployment, integrates with existing security and IT systems, and prices by protected device. That maps well to factories, utilities, and defense sites where cloud only tools and manual remediation both break down.
-
The market direction favors vendors that can cross IT, IoT, OT, and cloud in one control plane. Armis expanded from visibility into remediation through Silk Security, and Cato added IoT and OT inspection as an upsell module. That shows customers increasingly want fewer consoles and faster action, not another dashboard full of findings.
From here, the winning OT products are likely to pair asset discovery with safe automated change execution. If Remedio can become the engine that actually applies and verifies hardening across industrial fleets, it moves from an endpoint tool into a broader control layer for cyber physical infrastructure.