Home » Tech Value Chain » Global Brands » Huawei Debuts New AI-Powered Security at Black Hat MEA
News Desk -

Share

Huawei announced its participation in Black Hat MEA 2025, the region’s largest cybersecurity event, where it revealed new AI-powered innovations designed to strengthen resilience and support secure digital transformation across Saudi Arabia and the wider Middle East and Africa.

The event brought together government leaders, CSOs, security researchers, and technology partners. They reported how intelligence-driven defenses, unified architectures, and cloud-native security are reshaping cybersecurity strategies for modern enterprises.

Huawei showcased its Xinghe Intelligent Unified SASE Solution, which demonstrated how AI-native capabilities enhance prevention, detection, response, and recovery across campus, branch, WAN, data center, security ecosystem, cloud, and storage environments. The company said the solution enables organizations to reduce risk, simplify operations, and safeguard critical services at scale.

Huawei revealed that its AI-powered Xinghe Intelligent SASE unifies endpoint, network, and security under a single architecture. It integrates connectivity with data protection to deliver trusted access for users across all locations. A centralized management console supports consistent policy control for headquarters, branches, and remote teams, improving visibility and accelerating incident response.

The solution strengthens defenses across key environments. Campuses benefit from AI-enabled firewalls and endpoint protection. Data centers gain layered ransomware defenses supporting prevention, containment, backup integrity, and rapid recovery. Branches use converged secure gateways that merge networking and security to reduce total cost of ownership. Huawei also announced that it works with partners to provide an end-to-end security ecosystem covering detection, analysis, response, and compliance.

On Huawei Cloud, a unified security technology architecture enables collaborative operations across hybrid environments. The company reported that centralized group-control and group-defense policies deliver rapid response to emerging threats, while cloud-native services offer continuous posture management, workload protection, and zero-trust access aligned with evolving regulatory requirements.

Mohammed Alosaimi, Chief Cybersecurity and Privacy Officer of Huawei Saudi Arabia, said cybersecurity remains foundational to the Kingdom’s digital future. He stated that Huawei demonstrated AI-powered innovations—from the Xinghe AI network security solution to MRP anti-ransomware and cloud-native security architecture—that help organizations scale securely and strengthen resilience. He added that Huawei continues to uphold rigorous cybersecurity and privacy standards, supported by more than 3,000 specialists and extensive regional training and certification programs.

As intelligent transformation accelerates across the region, Huawei reported that it remains committed to delivering secure, reliable, and innovative solutions with industry partners to safeguard the Middle East’s digital future.