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Technology

CPX Holding Rebrands as UAE Cybersecurity Moves from IT Function to National Priority

CPX Holding's new identity signals a decisive shift toward AI-driven, intelligence-led security at a moment when the UAE's digital infrastructure has never been more exposed.

[For more news, click here]

In early 2026, breach attempts targeting UAE digital infrastructure tripled in a matter of weeks. The country now sits alongside the United States and Israel as one of the primary targets for state-linked cyber operations in the region. Against that backdrop, CPX Holding, the Abu Dhabi-based cyber and physical security firm founded in 2022, has unveiled a refreshed brand identity built around a single, pointed claim: "Secure what's next."

The rebrand is not a cosmetic exercise. It marks a deliberate repositioning from reactive defense to proactive, intelligence-led security, arriving at precisely the moment the UAE's regulatory and threat environment has made that shift not just strategically sound but operationally necessary.

CPX has grown rapidly since its founding in 2022, now supporting enterprises and government entities across the UAE

CPX was established in 2022, which makes its current scale all the more striking. In under four years, the company has contributed to 14 national transformation projects, secured more than 200 public and private sector customers, and grown its workforce to close to 600 employees. It has expanded its capabilities through a combination of organic growth and targeted acquisitions, covering threat intelligence, managed security services and infrastructure protection. For a company of its age, that trajectory describes something less like a startup finding its footing and more like an organisation that arrived with a mission already formed.

The brand refresh formalises that mission in a new positioning: "Secure what's next." The phrase is worth examining. It does not describe what CPX already protects. It describes what comes after that, the next wave of digital infrastructure, the next iteration of AI systems, the next class of risk that has not yet taken shape. The ambition embedded in that framing is deliberate.

Hadi Anwar, CEO of CPX, frames the shift in terms that go beyond marketing. "This brand refresh represents more than a new identity. It reflects a future facing outlook and readiness for what comes next. As the UAE advances its vision to become a global leader in digital innovation and resilience, cybersecurity is no longer a support function but a national priority. Our evolution reflects that shift. We are strengthening our AI driven capabilities, investing in talent and expanding our role in securing the systems that power economic and societal progress. This is the next chapter of our growth and our commitment to the nation we serve."

That phrase, "commitment to the nation," carries real weight in the UAE's technology landscape. The country has spent the past decade building a regulatory and institutional framework for sovereign digital capability, and CPX has positioned itself as a key component of that architecture. The company's work spans both public and private sectors, and its focus on critical infrastructure puts it at the centre of some of the UAE's most consequential digital systems.

The rebrand moves CPX's positioning from reactive defense toward proactive, intelligence-led cybersecurity across AI-enabled systems

The strategic move from reactive defense to what CPX describes as proactive, intelligence-led security is not simply a rhetorical shift. It reflects a broader rethink of how cybersecurity actually works in an AI-native environment. Traditional security models were built around perimeters and response: detect a threat, contain it, recover. That architecture assumes a relatively stable attack surface. In an environment where AI systems are continuously learning, where infrastructure is distributed across cloud and edge, and where threat actors are themselves using AI to scale and accelerate attacks, the old perimeter model is structurally inadequate.

The intelligence-led approach CPX is moving toward is built on anticipation rather than reaction, mapping emerging risk patterns before they crystallise into incidents, and building the analytical capability to act on that intelligence at machine speed. It is a meaningful step up in complexity, and it requires exactly the kind of talent investment CPX has signalled through its commitment to workforce development and local capability building.

That talent agenda aligns directly with the UAE's National Cyber Security Strategy for 2025 to 2031, which has shifted the country's focus from building capacity to active defense, placing sovereignty of digital skills alongside sovereignty of infrastructure. CPX's emphasis on growing local expertise in cybersecurity speaks to both the commercial opportunity and the national mandate, and its workforce of nearly 600 is a material contribution to a talent pool that the wider region still needs to develop.

The rebrand also arrives as the UAE's cybersecurity regulatory environment has become more demanding. Legislation enacted at the start of 2026 introduced new cyber-safety obligations across digital platforms, and the country's attack surface is widely acknowledged to have expanded faster than defences in some sectors. For enterprises and government entities navigating that environment, the value of a partner with CPX's institutional track record and AI-driven capability roadmap is increasingly clear.

With nearly 600 employees and contributions to 14 national transformation projects, CPX is one of the UAE's most significant homegrown security firms

What makes CPX's moment interesting is not that it is rebranding in a growth phase, though that in itself is a sign of strategic confidence. It is that the rebrand comes at the exact inflection point where cybersecurity shifts from being a feature of digital transformation to being its precondition. You cannot build an AI-enabled economy on insecure infrastructure. You cannot attract the sovereign investment the UAE is pursuing if the systems underpinning that investment are vulnerable. Security is no longer the thing you add at the end of a technology project. It is the thing you build the project around.

CPX's new positioning makes that argument in two words. Whether it can execute on the ambition those two words carry will be the more interesting story to watch.

Related Articles:

UAE Organisations Show Stronger Resilience Against Cyber Attacks

Why Trust Has Become the Most Valuable Currency in MENA's Digital Payment Revolution

SentinelOne and Cloudflare Expand Partnership for Real-Time Threat Detection Solutions


Technology

CPX Holding Rebrands as UAE Cybersecurity Moves from IT Function to National Priority

CPX Holding's new identity signals a decisive shift toward AI-driven, intelligence-led security at a moment when the UAE's digital infrastructure has never been more exposed.

[For more news, click here]

In early 2026, breach attempts targeting UAE digital infrastructure tripled in a matter of weeks. The country now sits alongside the United States and Israel as one of the primary targets for state-linked cyber operations in the region. Against that backdrop, CPX Holding, the Abu Dhabi-based cyber and physical security firm founded in 2022, has unveiled a refreshed brand identity built around a single, pointed claim: "Secure what's next."

The rebrand is not a cosmetic exercise. It marks a deliberate repositioning from reactive defense to proactive, intelligence-led security, arriving at precisely the moment the UAE's regulatory and threat environment has made that shift not just strategically sound but operationally necessary.

CPX has grown rapidly since its founding in 2022, now supporting enterprises and government entities across the UAE

CPX was established in 2022, which makes its current scale all the more striking. In under four years, the company has contributed to 14 national transformation projects, secured more than 200 public and private sector customers, and grown its workforce to close to 600 employees. It has expanded its capabilities through a combination of organic growth and targeted acquisitions, covering threat intelligence, managed security services and infrastructure protection. For a company of its age, that trajectory describes something less like a startup finding its footing and more like an organisation that arrived with a mission already formed.

The brand refresh formalises that mission in a new positioning: "Secure what's next." The phrase is worth examining. It does not describe what CPX already protects. It describes what comes after that, the next wave of digital infrastructure, the next iteration of AI systems, the next class of risk that has not yet taken shape. The ambition embedded in that framing is deliberate.

Hadi Anwar, CEO of CPX, frames the shift in terms that go beyond marketing. "This brand refresh represents more than a new identity. It reflects a future facing outlook and readiness for what comes next. As the UAE advances its vision to become a global leader in digital innovation and resilience, cybersecurity is no longer a support function but a national priority. Our evolution reflects that shift. We are strengthening our AI driven capabilities, investing in talent and expanding our role in securing the systems that power economic and societal progress. This is the next chapter of our growth and our commitment to the nation we serve."

That phrase, "commitment to the nation," carries real weight in the UAE's technology landscape. The country has spent the past decade building a regulatory and institutional framework for sovereign digital capability, and CPX has positioned itself as a key component of that architecture. The company's work spans both public and private sectors, and its focus on critical infrastructure puts it at the centre of some of the UAE's most consequential digital systems.

The rebrand moves CPX's positioning from reactive defense toward proactive, intelligence-led cybersecurity across AI-enabled systems

The strategic move from reactive defense to what CPX describes as proactive, intelligence-led security is not simply a rhetorical shift. It reflects a broader rethink of how cybersecurity actually works in an AI-native environment. Traditional security models were built around perimeters and response: detect a threat, contain it, recover. That architecture assumes a relatively stable attack surface. In an environment where AI systems are continuously learning, where infrastructure is distributed across cloud and edge, and where threat actors are themselves using AI to scale and accelerate attacks, the old perimeter model is structurally inadequate.

The intelligence-led approach CPX is moving toward is built on anticipation rather than reaction, mapping emerging risk patterns before they crystallise into incidents, and building the analytical capability to act on that intelligence at machine speed. It is a meaningful step up in complexity, and it requires exactly the kind of talent investment CPX has signalled through its commitment to workforce development and local capability building.

That talent agenda aligns directly with the UAE's National Cyber Security Strategy for 2025 to 2031, which has shifted the country's focus from building capacity to active defense, placing sovereignty of digital skills alongside sovereignty of infrastructure. CPX's emphasis on growing local expertise in cybersecurity speaks to both the commercial opportunity and the national mandate, and its workforce of nearly 600 is a material contribution to a talent pool that the wider region still needs to develop.

The rebrand also arrives as the UAE's cybersecurity regulatory environment has become more demanding. Legislation enacted at the start of 2026 introduced new cyber-safety obligations across digital platforms, and the country's attack surface is widely acknowledged to have expanded faster than defences in some sectors. For enterprises and government entities navigating that environment, the value of a partner with CPX's institutional track record and AI-driven capability roadmap is increasingly clear.

With nearly 600 employees and contributions to 14 national transformation projects, CPX is one of the UAE's most significant homegrown security firms

What makes CPX's moment interesting is not that it is rebranding in a growth phase, though that in itself is a sign of strategic confidence. It is that the rebrand comes at the exact inflection point where cybersecurity shifts from being a feature of digital transformation to being its precondition. You cannot build an AI-enabled economy on insecure infrastructure. You cannot attract the sovereign investment the UAE is pursuing if the systems underpinning that investment are vulnerable. Security is no longer the thing you add at the end of a technology project. It is the thing you build the project around.

CPX's new positioning makes that argument in two words. Whether it can execute on the ambition those two words carry will be the more interesting story to watch.

Related Articles:

UAE Organisations Show Stronger Resilience Against Cyber Attacks

Why Trust Has Become the Most Valuable Currency in MENA's Digital Payment Revolution

SentinelOne and Cloudflare Expand Partnership for Real-Time Threat Detection Solutions


Technology

CPX Holding Rebrands as UAE Cybersecurity Moves from IT Function to National Priority

CPX Holding's new identity signals a decisive shift toward AI-driven, intelligence-led security at a moment when the UAE's digital infrastructure has never been more exposed.

[For more news, click here]

In early 2026, breach attempts targeting UAE digital infrastructure tripled in a matter of weeks. The country now sits alongside the United States and Israel as one of the primary targets for state-linked cyber operations in the region. Against that backdrop, CPX Holding, the Abu Dhabi-based cyber and physical security firm founded in 2022, has unveiled a refreshed brand identity built around a single, pointed claim: "Secure what's next."

The rebrand is not a cosmetic exercise. It marks a deliberate repositioning from reactive defense to proactive, intelligence-led security, arriving at precisely the moment the UAE's regulatory and threat environment has made that shift not just strategically sound but operationally necessary.

CPX has grown rapidly since its founding in 2022, now supporting enterprises and government entities across the UAE

CPX was established in 2022, which makes its current scale all the more striking. In under four years, the company has contributed to 14 national transformation projects, secured more than 200 public and private sector customers, and grown its workforce to close to 600 employees. It has expanded its capabilities through a combination of organic growth and targeted acquisitions, covering threat intelligence, managed security services and infrastructure protection. For a company of its age, that trajectory describes something less like a startup finding its footing and more like an organisation that arrived with a mission already formed.

The brand refresh formalises that mission in a new positioning: "Secure what's next." The phrase is worth examining. It does not describe what CPX already protects. It describes what comes after that, the next wave of digital infrastructure, the next iteration of AI systems, the next class of risk that has not yet taken shape. The ambition embedded in that framing is deliberate.

Hadi Anwar, CEO of CPX, frames the shift in terms that go beyond marketing. "This brand refresh represents more than a new identity. It reflects a future facing outlook and readiness for what comes next. As the UAE advances its vision to become a global leader in digital innovation and resilience, cybersecurity is no longer a support function but a national priority. Our evolution reflects that shift. We are strengthening our AI driven capabilities, investing in talent and expanding our role in securing the systems that power economic and societal progress. This is the next chapter of our growth and our commitment to the nation we serve."

That phrase, "commitment to the nation," carries real weight in the UAE's technology landscape. The country has spent the past decade building a regulatory and institutional framework for sovereign digital capability, and CPX has positioned itself as a key component of that architecture. The company's work spans both public and private sectors, and its focus on critical infrastructure puts it at the centre of some of the UAE's most consequential digital systems.

The rebrand moves CPX's positioning from reactive defense toward proactive, intelligence-led cybersecurity across AI-enabled systems

The strategic move from reactive defense to what CPX describes as proactive, intelligence-led security is not simply a rhetorical shift. It reflects a broader rethink of how cybersecurity actually works in an AI-native environment. Traditional security models were built around perimeters and response: detect a threat, contain it, recover. That architecture assumes a relatively stable attack surface. In an environment where AI systems are continuously learning, where infrastructure is distributed across cloud and edge, and where threat actors are themselves using AI to scale and accelerate attacks, the old perimeter model is structurally inadequate.

The intelligence-led approach CPX is moving toward is built on anticipation rather than reaction, mapping emerging risk patterns before they crystallise into incidents, and building the analytical capability to act on that intelligence at machine speed. It is a meaningful step up in complexity, and it requires exactly the kind of talent investment CPX has signalled through its commitment to workforce development and local capability building.

That talent agenda aligns directly with the UAE's National Cyber Security Strategy for 2025 to 2031, which has shifted the country's focus from building capacity to active defense, placing sovereignty of digital skills alongside sovereignty of infrastructure. CPX's emphasis on growing local expertise in cybersecurity speaks to both the commercial opportunity and the national mandate, and its workforce of nearly 600 is a material contribution to a talent pool that the wider region still needs to develop.

The rebrand also arrives as the UAE's cybersecurity regulatory environment has become more demanding. Legislation enacted at the start of 2026 introduced new cyber-safety obligations across digital platforms, and the country's attack surface is widely acknowledged to have expanded faster than defences in some sectors. For enterprises and government entities navigating that environment, the value of a partner with CPX's institutional track record and AI-driven capability roadmap is increasingly clear.

With nearly 600 employees and contributions to 14 national transformation projects, CPX is one of the UAE's most significant homegrown security firms

What makes CPX's moment interesting is not that it is rebranding in a growth phase, though that in itself is a sign of strategic confidence. It is that the rebrand comes at the exact inflection point where cybersecurity shifts from being a feature of digital transformation to being its precondition. You cannot build an AI-enabled economy on insecure infrastructure. You cannot attract the sovereign investment the UAE is pursuing if the systems underpinning that investment are vulnerable. Security is no longer the thing you add at the end of a technology project. It is the thing you build the project around.

CPX's new positioning makes that argument in two words. Whether it can execute on the ambition those two words carry will be the more interesting story to watch.

Related Articles:

UAE Organisations Show Stronger Resilience Against Cyber Attacks

Why Trust Has Become the Most Valuable Currency in MENA's Digital Payment Revolution

SentinelOne and Cloudflare Expand Partnership for Real-Time Threat Detection Solutions


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