Dedalus builds the digital plumbing for healthcare systems - clinical information systems, diagnostic platforms, and operational software that connect hospitals, diagnostic centers, and care facilities across 40 countries. The threat model here is straightforward: when the platform handles data for 540 million people, a breach or a misconfigured integration isn't a theoretical risk, it's a systemic failure with patient safety on the line. The stack spans data integration, workflow automation, and an open, standards-based architecture designed to move critical patient information across the continuum of care, from prevention through rehabilitation.
The company powers roughly 7,500 healthcare organizations and 5,700 diagnostic centers. That scale means security work touches everything from clinical data flows between caregivers to diagnostic system integrity to operational uptime. The platform's openness and standards-based design create a specific surface area: interoperability is a feature, but it also means the attack surface is broad, spanning multiple integration points, legacy systems, and cross-facility data exchanges.
Dedalus's domain is deeply vertical - healthcare IT isn't a sideline. Teams working here operate in a regulatory-heavy environment where compliance frameworks and data protection aren't optional layers but core architectural constraints. The mission centers on enabling clinicians to deliver safe, reliable care, which in practice means building systems where security, availability, and data integrity aren't afterthoughts but load-bearing elements of the entire platform.