With its key role in the Olympic Games of Paris 2024, Suadeo is a leader in the supervision of large-scale operations and coordination. Its Digital Hub and business applications are major accelerators for new steering strategies in the broad sense: safety, logistics, environmental… Capable of anticipating threats by cross-referencing real-time data from various sources, the Suadeo solution is a model for innovation, having been able to differentiate itself from giants such as Athéa and Palantir.
[Excerpts from the article L’Informé, published on 02/12/2024: Big Data: «After the success of Paris 2024, Suadeo interests three other countries»]
“Its software “hypervisor” [paramétrage de sa plateforme de Self Data Services], which equips The Ministry of the Interior, played an important role in the security of the Olympic Games.
After Paris, the world? After the safe success of the 2024 Olympic Games, where no major incidents were reported, software manufacturer Suadeo, which equips the Ministry of the Interior with its “hypervisor”, wants to take full advantage of this showcase to exploit its platform. Capable of processing data captured on social networks, in the media, but also in transport or energy networks, and cross-checking it with information collected on the ground by security forces and civil defence, this solution allows to identify “weak signals” to anticipate and respond to threats as quickly as possible. A tool that, according to our information, is of interest to three serious prospects abroad.
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Contacted by the Informed, Suadeo confirms our information. “We are very happy, following the success of the Paris Games, to exchange with these foreign institutional actors, interested in the approach that we have put in place with the Ministry of the Interior”, says Suadeo.
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Before Paris 2024 and the 2023 rugby world cup, Suadeo had won against Athéa – the joint venture of Atos and Thalès that develops the military intelligence big data platform, Artemis.IA – and the American Palantir, formerly used by the DGSI.
To read the full article, go to the website of “L’Informé”