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NetRise Announces Partner-Led Managed Software Supply Chain Risk Management Offering for the Federal Market

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NetRise (NYSE:ACN) announced a partner-led managed software supply chain risk management offering for the U.S. federal market, launched with Asc3nd Technologies Group. The service combines NetRise binary analysis with NetRise Provenance context to help agencies inventory software, validate SBOMs, assess cryptography and support federal cybersecurity directives.

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AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

Positive

  • None.

Negative

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Key Figures

CISA BOD: 26-04 AI executive order date: June 2, 2026 Post-quantum EO date: June 22, 2026 +2 more
5 metrics
CISA BOD 26-04 Binding Operational Directive on risk-based security updates (June 10, 2026)
AI executive order date June 2, 2026 Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security
Post-quantum EO date June 22, 2026 Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks
PQ migration deadline 1 2030 First migration deadline set in post-quantum cryptography executive order
PQ migration deadline 2 2031 Second migration deadline set in post-quantum cryptography executive order

Peers on Argus

ACN was down modestly while key peers showed mixed moves, with some small declin...

ACN was down modestly while key peers showed mixed moves, with some small declines and others, like WIT, up notably. This pattern points to stock-specific factors rather than a broad sector swing.

Historical Context

5 past events · Latest: Jun 24 (Positive)
Pattern 5 events
Date Event Sentiment Move Catalyst
Jun 24 Engineering partnership Positive +1.7% Deal with Coretura to accelerate unified SDV software platform development.
Jun 23 Sports tech alliance Positive +1.8% Global partnership with Seattle Seahawks focused on tech, data and AI.
Jun 23 AI services launch Positive +1.8% Launch of Accenture Edge targeting mid-market AI and tech services demand.
Jun 23 Buyback increase Positive +1.8% Fiscal 2026 share repurchase program lifted to $7.5 billion total.
Jun 21 Data platform build Positive -6.6% New financial data and insights platform built with INFRONEER and SAP.
Pattern Detected

Recent ACN headlines have more often been followed by modest gains, with one notable downside divergence after seemingly positive news.

Regulatory & Risk Context

Short Interest: 4.23%
Short Interest
4.23% of float
0% 15% 30%+
low as of 2026-06-15 Days to cover: 5.92

Short interest appears relatively low, suggesting limited squeeze dynamics and typically moderate volatility from positioning alone.

Market Pulse Summary

This announcement deepens ACN’s federal software risk capabilities, aligning with recent tech partne...
Analysis

This announcement deepens ACN’s federal software risk capabilities, aligning with recent tech partnerships and AI initiatives. The low short interest limits positioning risk, but recent insider net selling and execution on federal opportunities remain key factors to monitor.

Key Terms

post-quantum cryptography, cryptographic bill of materials, firmware
3 terms
post-quantum cryptography technical
"The post-quantum cryptography executive order, Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks"
Post-quantum cryptography is a set of new methods for scrambling data so it stays secure even if powerful quantum computers exist; think of replacing today’s locks with designs that a future high‑speed lockpicker cannot open. For investors, it matters because companies must upgrade systems, meet regulations, and protect customer and trade data—creating costs, competitive advantages, or legal and reputational risks depending on how quickly and effectively they adopt these new security standards.
cryptographic bill of materials technical
"directs CISA and NIST to define a cryptographic bill of materials, which depends on visibility"
A cryptographic bill of materials is a verified inventory of the encryption tools and settings a product uses—such as algorithms, key sizes, versions and the sources of those components—often accompanied by digital fingerprints or signatures that prove authenticity. Like an ingredient list with receipts and seals of origin, it helps investors assess security, regulatory compliance and supply‑chain risk; gaps or weak items can signal potential liabilities, remediation costs or reputational damage that affect value.
firmware technical
"asset inventory across firmware, operating systems, containers and applications. NetRise Provenance adds"
Firmware is the built-in software that tells a physical device how to operate, stored in the device’s permanent memory rather than on a removable app. Think of it as the instruction manual glued into a gadget’s brain that controls basic functions and features. Investors care because firmware updates or flaws can change a product’s capabilities, security, repair costs, regulatory compliance and customer satisfaction, all of which can affect sales, margins and company value.

AI-generated analysis. Not financial advice.

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New offering helps federal agencies operationalize software supply chain risk management with binary-derived evidence and provenance context for a more complete view of software risk

AUSTIN, Texas, July 1, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- NetRise today announced a partner-led managed software supply chain risk management offering for the federal market. Delivered through trusted federal integrators and managed service providers, the offering enables partners to combine NetRise's independent binary analysis of compiled artifacts with NetRise Provenance, which adds software supply chain context, including the extent of the reach of software supply chain compromises, to help agencies better assess and address software risk across the products, dependencies and vendors they rely on. NetRise is working with Asc3nd Technologies Group as a strategic launch partner for this program.

"Federal agencies are being asked to make software supply chain risk management operational, not just aspirational," said Thomas Pace, co-founder and CEO of NetRise. "That requires more than questionnaires, attestations or isolated tools. By enabling trusted partners with binary-derived evidence of what is actually in software, along with provenance intelligence that helps explain who is behind it and how far risk can spread, NetRise is helping agencies turn software risk into something they can assess, prioritize and act on at scale."

The offering is designed to help partners deliver software supply chain risk management as an operational capability across acquisition, authorization, continuous monitoring and incident response. Three recent federal actions bear directly on this work.

  • CISA Binding Operational Directive 26-04, Prioritizing Security Updates Based on Risk (June 10, 2026), requires federal civilian agencies to prioritize remediation by asset exposure and known exploited vulnerability status, which is only as accurate as an agency's understanding of the software actually running on each asset.
  • The AI executive order, Promoting Advanced Artificial Intelligence Innovation and Security (June 2, 2026), responds to AI compressing the time between vulnerability disclosure and exploitation, raising the premium on fast and accurate software inventory.
  • The post-quantum cryptography executive order, Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks (June 22, 2026), sets 2030 and 2031 migration deadlines and directs CISA and NIST to define a cryptographic bill of materials, which depends on visibility into the cryptographic algorithms embedded in deployed software and firmware.

NetRise starts from the binary to create an independent, full-stack software asset inventory across firmware, operating systems, containers and applications. NetRise Provenance adds a complementary layer of software supply chain context by mapping components to canonical repositories, contributors, maintainers, organizations and regions, while surfacing repository health signals and dependency blast radius - the extent of downstream impact when an open-source component is compromised - to help teams make better third-party risk, procurement and incident response decisions. Together, these capabilities help partners support federal agencies in several important ways:

  • Validate vendor-provided SBOMs against compiled artifacts and build a binary-derived inventory of the software that actually executes, giving agencies the asset-level software context that BOD 26-04 prioritization depends on
  • Enrich that inventory with provenance context, including software origin, contributor and maintainer signals, repository health and dependency blast radius
  • Identify the cryptographic algorithms and libraries present in compiled software and firmware, supporting the cryptographic inventory and bill-of-materials work the post-quantum executive order requires
  • Support federal workflows spanning vendor onboarding, RMF and ATO activities, continuous monitoring and faster scoping of software supply chain incidents, at the speed AI-accelerated exploitation timelines now demand

"Federal agencies can't manage what they can't see — and the teams we support don't just need better tools, they sometimes need a trusted partner who can operationalize those capabilities inside their environments," said Sarn Gabriel Bien-Aime, Founder & CEO, Asc3nd Technologies Group.  "Asc3nd has built our federal practice around closing that visibility gap, and NetRise gives our customers the binary-derived evidence and provenance intelligence to move from compliance theater to real, scalable risk management. We're proud to be the first partner bringing this vision to the federal market.  Now, as integrated with our AI ARES platform we are more ready than ever to uncover risk and vulnerability across Federal environments that they never would have surfaced without this suite of capabilities."

"Recent software supply chain incidents have made one thing clear: As attackers shift left and move further upstream, agencies and their partners cannot focus only on development-time controls," said Pace. "They also need to shift right and gain visibility into the software that is already running in production. When you combine binary analysis of what you actually build, buy and deploy with provenance intelligence about who is behind that software and how risk can spread, you can make better third-party risk decisions, respond faster and build more resilient federal systems."

Resources:
NetRise Provenance Data Sheet

About NetRise

NetRise is the software supply chain security company that exists to eliminate blind trust in software forever. By identifying every component in each binary image across firmware, kernels, operating systems, containers, and applications, NetRise exposes the full stack of inherited risk that source-based tools, vendor SBOMs, and questionnaires cannot see. Non-code related risk uncovered includes hidden dependencies, cryptographic artifacts, misconfigurations, secrets, among others. Global enterprises that produce and consume software, including government agencies, rely on NetRise to validate what they ship and what they run. When the software supply chain is compromised by bad actors, NetRise answers the questions, "how far do these compromises extend?" and "where am I exposed?" enabling rapid identification, prioritization, mitigation, and policy updates, reducing material risk to the business. NetRise has entered into an agreement to be acquired by Accenture (NYSE: ACN), which is also taking a majority investment in Dragos. Upon close of the transactions, NetRise will operate under Dragos.

Media Contact:
Danielle Ostrovsky
Hi-Touch PR
Ostrovsky@Hi-TouchPR.com

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SOURCE NetRise

FAQ

What did NetRise (ACN) announce on July 1, 2026 for the federal market?

NetRise announced a partner-led managed software supply chain risk management offering for U.S. federal agencies. According to NetRise, it combines independent binary analysis with Provenance context to help agencies assess software risk across products, dependencies and vendors they rely on.

How does NetRise’s new offering help federal agencies manage software supply chain risk?

The offering helps agencies build a binary-derived software asset inventory and enrich it with supply chain provenance. According to NetRise, this supports acquisition, authorization, continuous monitoring and incident response by revealing what software runs on each asset and how risks can spread.

What role does NetRise Provenance play in the new federal offering (ACN)?

NetRise Provenance adds software supply chain context such as software origin, contributors, maintainers and repository health. According to NetRise, it also surfaces dependency blast radius, helping agencies make better third-party risk, procurement and incident response decisions for deployed software and firmware.

How does NetRise address post-quantum cryptography requirements for federal agencies?

NetRise identifies cryptographic algorithms and libraries present in compiled software and firmware. According to NetRise, this capability supports cryptographic inventory and bill-of-materials work tied to the post-quantum cryptography executive order’s 2030–2031 migration deadlines for federal systems.

How are NetRise and Asc3nd Technologies Group partnering to serve federal cybersecurity needs?

NetRise is working with Asc3nd Technologies Group as a strategic launch partner for the managed service. According to NetRise and Asc3nd, federal integrators can operationalize binary-derived evidence and provenance intelligence, integrated with Asc3nd’s AI ARES platform, to uncover hidden risk and vulnerabilities.