Problem. Sensitive data displayed on screens is the largest unprotected surface in the enterprise. A smartphone or camera pointed at a monitor produces no log, no alert, and no trace. Traditional DLP, EDR, and AI-native data security tools all monitor software channels — email, cloud, network, endpoint — and cannot detect optical exfiltration. The result: trade secrets, customer data, source code, financial records, and patient information leak through phone cameras every day, in offices everywhere, undetected.
Solution. ScreenStop is an on-device computer vision platform that detects the precise moment a camera or smartphone is aimed at a screen and obscures sensitive content before the shutter clicks. The technology runs locally on Windows and macOS, requires no cloud connectivity, supports on-premises Docker deployment, and uses a proprietary computer vision pipeline with cascaded filtering. The product is patent-pending. It is built to integrate alongside existing DLP investments — not as a replacement, but as the optical layer those systems were never designed to provide.
Market. ScreenStop defines a new category: Screen DLP. It serves regulated and IP-sensitive industries where screen-visible data is a daily exposure — banking, healthcare, insurance, law, defense, and enterprise tech. The buyer is the CISO. The product is sold per user, deployable across distributed and hybrid workforces.
Company. Founded by Nicky Pappo — a four-time founder, Technion CS graduate, ex-Microsoft, ex-Elbit Systems. Based in Haifa. Backed by an IIA Tnufa grant. Currently raising pre-seed.