Edgescan

Edgescan

Speciality: Continuous Penetration Testing

Dublin, Ireland 92 employees
[01] About

Cybersecurity company specializing in penetration testing, vulnerability management, and attack surface management; 72 employees, $10M revenue, founded 2011 in Dublin, Ireland; $13.6M funding; offers a unified platform for continuous security testing and PTaaS, with active market presence and recent security research publications.

Edgescan is a unified platform for Continuous Security Testing, Exposure Management, and Penetration Testing as a Service (PTaaS). We help organizations continuously identify, validate, prioritize, and remediate vulnerabilities across their entire digital footprint—networks, web apps, APIs, cloud, and more. Unlike traditional scanners, Edgescan delivers AI powered and human-validated, false-positive-free vulnerability intelligence so security teams can focus on what matters most. We support the full Continuous Threat and Exposure Management (CTEM) lifecycle, offering visibility, context, and actionable insights through a single, scalable platform. Our hybrid approach combines automation for scale and expert analysis for precision, ensuring high-fidelity results aligned with real-world risk. Proprietary breach and risk scoring helps prioritize based on business impact—not just CVSS. Edgescan’s PTaaS delivers on-demand, deep-dive testing with continuous monitoring, streamlining compliance, and supporting DevSecOps initiatives. Integration with tools like Jira, ServiceNow, and Splunk ensures seamless workflows and faster remediation. Trusted globally by enterprises and government agencies, Edgescan empowers teams to reduce risk, prove compliance, and stay ahead of evolving threats.
[02] Services
Penetration Testing As A Service
Dynamic Application Security Testing
API Security Testing
Network Vulnerability Management
Mobile Application Security Testing
Attack Surface Management
[03] Certifications
PCI DSS

PCI DSS Certification


Origin


The Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) was created in 2004 by the major credit card companies: Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, and JCB International. These companies formed the PCI Security Standards Council in 2006 to manage and evolve the standard. PCI DSS was developed in response to increasing credit card fraud and data breaches, establishing a unified set of security requirements for all organizations that store, process, or transmit cardholder data. The goal was to create consistent security measures across the payment card industry to protect sensitive payment information.


Industry Value and Importance


PCI DSS compliance is mandatory for any business that handles credit card transactions, making it one of the most critical security standards in commerce today. The certification demonstrates that an organization has implemented robust security controls, including network protection, access management, encryption, and regular security testing. Non-compliance can result in severe consequences, including substantial fines (up to $100,000 per month), increased transaction fees, loss of payment processing privileges, and reputational damage following a breach. For IT professionals, PCI DSS expertise is highly valued as organizations across all industries need qualified personnel to implement, maintain, and audit these security controls.

BCC Risk Advisory Certification
Comptia

CompTIA Certification Origins


CompTIA (Computing Technology Industry Association) was founded in 1982 as a non-profit trade association representing the international technology community. The organization began offering IT certifications in the early 1990s, with the CompTIA A+ certification launching in 1993 as one of the first vendor-neutral IT certifications. CompTIA created these certifications to establish standardized benchmarks for IT knowledge and skills across the rapidly evolving technology industry, providing employers with reliable measures of technical competency independent of any specific hardware or software manufacturer.


Industry Value and Importance


CompTIA certifications are widely recognized and valued because they validate fundamental and advanced IT skills through vendor-neutral, performance-based testing. Employers across industries trust these certifications as proof of practical knowledge, making them often a baseline requirement for entry-level and mid-level IT positions. The certifications are particularly respected because they're developed through industry-wide job task analysis involving hundreds of subject matter experts, ensuring the content remains relevant to real-world IT work. Additionally, many CompTIA certifications (like Security+) meet U.S. Department of Defense requirements and are recognized internationally, adding significant career value for IT professionals seeking employment in both private and government sectors.

[05] Notable Clients
  • Icon Clinical
  • PaddyPower-Betfair
  • RTÉ
  • Major Banks