Dubai Startup Uses Automation to Transform SME Cybersecurity 
From Dubai, Khaled Al Qubaisi runs a tech startup focused on helping smaller firms fight cyber threats faster using smart automation. Instead of waiting hours to react, businesses now see alerts cut down dramatically thanks to his system. His firm, KhaledTech, pulls together data like firewall records, device warnings, and online service activity onto one screen. Because of this setup, companies spot dangers early, sort what matters most, then fix issues automatically – no big internal tech crew needed. In the Middle East, many small operations struggle with limited security help while attack numbers climb. With ransomware and scam emails growing more common, having support like this fills a real need.
Trained on regional threats, KhaledTech’s system uses machine learning to recognize phishing tricks common in specific areas, along with attacks aimed at logistics, retail, or hospitals. Instead of acting fully on its own, it works alongside people – stopping infected devices automatically yet calling a security expert when risks run high. This blend cuts recovery time sharply, sometimes by nearly two thirds. Outside development walls, collaboration shapes deployment; partnerships with homegrown cyber companies help slide these tools into real-world systems like automated warehouses and intelligent building controls.
Out of Abu Dhabi comes Khaled, building his name through a mix of machines and mentorship – free classes help small business leaders make sense of warning signals and set up essential digital guards. What he does fits something bigger unfolding quietly: online protection now leans less on selling tools alone, more on full support systems using smart software, internet-based designs, together with local insight.