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The CEO heard about it before the board meeting. “What did you change, Alex?”

Alex Chen, IT Manager at NexGen Dynamics , stared at the blinking red dashboard. Twenty-seven endpoints were offline. Three executives had lost their encrypted files to a ransomware variant that slipped through their legacy antivirus. And the new remote hire in Berlin couldn’t even log into her laptop. miradore premium

Even Carol from Accounting, who once called the help desk because her mouse was “acting weird,” successfully onboarded her new iPad without a single call. The CEO heard about it before the board meeting

The CEO’s email arrived at 4:58 PM. Board meeting tomorrow. Bring answers. Three executives had lost their encrypted files to

“Miradore,” Alex said, not looking away from the console. “It’s like having a key to every device.” The same variant that hit them last week tried again. This time, Miradore’s real-time compliance engine flagged the infected machine within 14 seconds. Alex triggered an automatic response: quarantine the device from the corporate Wi-Fi, kill the user’s session, and force a BitLocker recovery key re-entry.

The variant died in isolation. No lateral movement. No encrypted shares.

Alex didn’t answer. He was too busy manually patching a server via RDP—a server that should have auto-updated six months ago. But their old device management tool was a skeleton. It could track assets, sure. It could push a basic reboot. But compliance? Zero-touch deployment? Conditional access based on real-time risk?