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Tanium adds four products to NATO assurance catalogue

Tanium adds four products to NATO assurance catalogue

Tue, 12th May 2026 (Yesterday)
Sofiah Nichole Salivio
SOFIAH NICHOLE SALIVIO News Editor

Tanium has added four products to the NATO Information Assurance Product Catalogue following evaluation by the NATO Cyber Security Centre.

The catalogue helps NATO nations and allied bodies identify information assurance products that have been evaluated for use or procurement against NATO operational requirements.

The newly listed products are Tanium Core Plus, Tanium Endpoint Management Plus, Tanium Security Operations and Tanium Exposure Management Plus, covering endpoint management, security operations, exposure management and the company's core platform.

NATO's catalogue serves as a reference point for civil and military bodies seeking approved technologies for defence environments. Inclusion can help procurement teams and operational units narrow their options to products already scrutinised for secure deployment.

Four products

Tanium Core Plus is the base layer of the platform, adding functions such as peer benchmarking, certificate management and controlled remote access to endpoints. Tanium Endpoint Management Plus includes automated endpoint provisioning, security policy enforcement and tools for employee experience management.

Tanium Security Operations, previously known as Tanium Incident Response, is designed for threat hunting, analytics, digital forensics and remediation. Tanium Exposure Management Plus, formerly Tanium Risk & Compliance, focuses on identifying and prioritising vulnerabilities, compliance issues and sensitive data findings across endpoints, and includes runtime software bill of materials generation.

The NATO Information Assurance Product Catalogue covers products already in use or available for procurement across the alliance and associated bodies. The listing gives defence organisations a validated way to assess which tools may fit complex security and operational environments.

Tanium presented the addition as recognition that its products meet the standards applied to systems intended for demanding missions. It said the evaluation supports use cases where organisations need visibility across large endpoint estates and a single view of operational and security data.

Dan Streetman, Chief Executive Officer of Tanium, said: "Recognition in the NIAPC reflects the confidence NATO places in technologies that can support complex, high-stakes missions, and we are proud that our platform meets those expectations. The catalogue helps NATO organisations quickly understand which solutions are equipped for secure, real-world deployment, and this acknowledgement reinforces the value Tanium's Autonomous IT Platform brings to defence teams. With unified IT operations and security based on real-time intelligence from our platform, mission operators are better positioned to accelerate decisions, save costs, and strengthen their security and operational resilience."

The four products were assessed by the NATO Cyber Security Centre before being entered into the catalogue. The process is intended to give NATO bodies and member nations a common source of evaluated products for information assurance needs.

For suppliers to defence and government buyers, inclusion in such catalogues can matter because procurement cycles often require evidence that tools meet established technical and operational standards. In practice, that can affect how quickly products move from evaluation to deployment in sensitive environments.

Tanium has focused its pitch on organisations that need direct visibility and control across large endpoint estates. In defence settings, those estates can include fixed infrastructure, mobile devices and systems distributed across multiple operational regions.

The addition of four Tanium offerings, rather than a single product, means NATO users reviewing the catalogue will see the company across several parts of the endpoint and cyber operations stack, including day-to-day device management, threat response and the identification of security exposures.

The listing also reflects a broader trend in defence technology procurement toward platforms that combine operational management with security oversight. Buyers increasingly want fewer disconnected tools in environments where speed of response and a clear asset picture are central to risk management.