On the sidelines of GITEX 2025, Vishal Gauri, Chief Executive Officer of Seclore, explained how the company’s mission is to secure information wherever it goes, ensuring true end-to-end data security in an increasingly borderless digital world.
As industries continue to be transformed by AI-driven capabilities, Seclore has positioned itself at the forefront of data protection to achieve security in the enterprise.
Vishal Gauri shared: “Seclore is a data protection company. We protect information, no matter where it goes. You can protect perimeters, applications, or clouds, but unless you protect the data itself, you are not truly protected”.
Gauri said that Seclore’s platform enables customers to control how data is used, who can access it, and what actions can be performed on it, all while maintaining seamless collaboration across vendors, partners, and customers. “We allow organisations to collaborate securely across boundaries”, he added.
Seclore’s vision goes beyond access control and encryption. The company is integrating intelligence and contextual understanding into its platform to identify which data needs protection in the first place.
“What we’re building now is intelligence into the product”, Gauri explained. “The right way to do this is to understand what data should be protected. That’s a difficult problem to solve. You have to discover what’s in the enterprise, understand the context of documents, and determine their intent, whether they are meant to be shared or not”.
He highlighted that Seclore aims to be an end-to-end data protection company, safeguarding data throughout its entire journey, “from when it’s created, edited, shared, or consumed”. The goal, he said, is to help customers “understand what sensitive information they have, understand its context, protect it using Seclore, and gain deep insights into how it’s being used, where it’s going, and what threats exist”.
Gauri said that Seclore’s end-to-end vision is resonating strongly with enterprises facing new data security challenges driven by AI adoption. “The response at GITEX has been fantastic”, he said. “We’re talking to customers and understanding the challenges they face in data protection, especially as AI becomes part of every enterprise. Organisations must understand and protect unstructured information”.
He pointed out that AI is generating and consuming massive amounts of data. “GenAI tools are now generating reportedly ninety percent of documents in enterprises that have adopted AI”, he explained. “Someone gives an instruction, and the GenAI tool creates a report, a document, or a letter. At the same time, enterprise AI tools are indexing repositories like OneDrive, SharePoint, and Box, consuming information to provide context and insights”.
This, Gauri said, introduces significant risk. “We want to educate customers that without real protection, the adoption of GenAI will be fraught with risks, and the same applies to agentic AI. You can control the identity of humans and how they consume data with Seclore, but what happens when AI agents begin accessing information?”
Seclore’s focus, he added, is on educating enterprises about these emerging threats while learning from their evolving needs. “We want to understand the challenges they’re facing and help them find solutions”, he said.
Gauri also emphasised the importance of secure collaboration in a world where data flows freely between organisations and geographies.
“Any product that provides data security while ensuring collaboration is the way of the future. Data is moving across boundaries, across countries, and across organisations. That’s a difficult problem to solve, but also a huge opportunity. The goal is to provide secure collaboration while protecting against the risks that come from AI adoption. That’s what’s top of mind for us and our customers”, he concluded.
Image Credit: Seclore