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The New Age of Infiltration and the Collapse of Firewall-Based Security

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SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) says its technology defends institutions by linking physical materials to a verifiable provenance, aiming to stop subtle supply‑chain infiltration that can turn into digital manipulation. The company describes threats that exploit trusted components, parts, and products to evade protocols, then blend into operations. SMX’s system embeds a molecular identity into materials (gold, rubber, liquids, textiles and more) so origins and tampering can be detected and counterfeits exposed. The release says SMX is gaining deal traction across continents and positions its technology as a way to secure both physical inputs and downstream digital systems.

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News Market Reaction – SMX

+10.14% 8.3x vol
10 alerts
+10.14% News Effect
+29.6% Peak Tracked
-22.2% Trough Tracked
+$410K Valuation Impact
$4M Market Cap
8.3x Rel. Volume

On the day this news was published, SMX gained 10.14%, reflecting a significant positive market reaction. Argus tracked a peak move of +29.6% during that session. Argus tracked a trough of -22.2% from its starting point during tracking. Our momentum scanner triggered 10 alerts that day, indicating notable trading interest and price volatility. This price movement added approximately $410K to the company's valuation, bringing the market cap to $4M at that time. Trading volume was exceptionally heavy at 8.3x the daily average, suggesting very strong buying interest.

Data tracked by StockTitan Argus on the day of publication.

NEW YORK, NY / ACCESS Newswire / November 21, 2025 / Around the world, nations are discovering that security now has two fronts. The physical front that protects borders, and the institutional front that protects trust. Governments poured resources into the first. The second has been left exposed. Institutions built on access and openness are now confronting threats that move quietly, slowly, and deliberately. They don't break rules. They use them. And that shift has created a global demand for a new kind of defense.

The exact type that SMX (NASDAQ:SMX) provides. Its technology closes the blind spots adversarial actors have exploited for years. The company has long warned that the next wave of security breaches would merge physical infiltration with digital manipulation, and today's patterns confirm that warning with precision.

Notably, these vulnerabilities aren't tied to any one country or ideology. They come from structural weaknesses in open systems built on participation and trust. That trust worked when threats were external, obvious, and easy to isolate. It doesn't hold when influence can hide inside the routines of institutional life. The infiltration of today is about access, not intrusion.

In other words, the compromise can be subtle. It doesn't trigger alarms or violate protocols. It enters through the everyday materials that move through supply chains, slipping in through components, parts, and products that appear routine. Once inside, it blends into operations until familiarity becomes its camouflage. That's the problem.

Most institutions lack the tools to verify where those materials truly originate, how they were handled, or whether they carry hidden vulnerabilities. SMX, now gaining deal traction across continents, is helping companies, institutions, and governments ensure those vulnerabilities never reach the point of catastrophe.

Where Physical Inputs and Digital Systems Converge

That protection starts with the obvious. Every modern threat begins with the physical. Bad actors understand that the easiest path into an institution is not through code or policy, but through the materials used. A single compromised component can enter a factory, a data center, a government lab, or a defense contractor long before cybersecurity systems ever activate. Once inside, that material becomes a trusted object, and trust becomes the attack surface.

From there, infiltration evolves. A corrupted chip can alter data. A counterfeit sensor can distort measurements. A compromised module can open digital pathways that no firewall was built to monitor. Physical infiltration becomes digital influence, and digital influence becomes institutional vulnerability. The chain starts with materials and ends with systems that no longer know what to trust.

This merger of physical access and digital impact is the defining threat of the modern era. It's not dramatic. It's procedural. It uses supply-chain familiarity to validate inputs, and those inputs to manipulate downstream information and operations. To truly be secured, that chain must be fortified at every link. SMX provides the technology to do that.

The SMX System is Built for Both Dimensions of Modern Security

SMX secures the physical world by giving materials, documents, and products a molecular identity. It embeds memory and provenance into the item itself. It can be gold, rubber, liquids, or textiles. Virtually any material can benefit. Once embedded, tampering becomes impossible to hide. Counterfeits become easy to expose. Origins remain inseparable from the objects they belong to.

This has always been SMX's foundation, and as new threats emerge, its technology is showing it can be an essential part of global stability protocols. No, SMX cannot control what people think. But it can eliminate the deception that enables influence. It verifies the provenance of the materials, credentials, and hardware entering a system, making manipulation transparent and infiltration visible. That is how it defends. And by securing every link in the chain, that capability becomes the impenetrable piece of the arsenal that protects both critical assets and the people who depend on them.

About SMX

As global businesses face new and complex challenges related to carbon neutrality and meeting governmental and regional regulations and standards, SMX can offer players along the value chain access to its marking, tracking, measurement, and digital platform technology to transition more successfully to a low-carbon economy.

Forward-Looking Statements

This editorial contains forward-looking statements that involve significant risks and uncertainties. These statements reflect current views regarding the potential use of SMX technology to enhance institutional integrity, strengthen verification systems, and reduce the risk of infiltration by bad actors or nefarious networks. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements regarding anticipated improvements in institutional security, the possible adoption of molecular-level verification, the ability of SMX systems to protect credentials, documents, or access pathways, and the broader market or regulatory conditions that may influence demand for such solutions. These statements are based on assumptions that may prove inaccurate and are subject to factors that are difficult to predict. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied due to a range of uncertainties, including changes in government policy, evolving threat landscapes, institutional readiness, regulatory considerations, funding cycles, technological constraints, and other risks detailed in SMX's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date of this editorial. Readers should not place undue reliance on them. SMX undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect new information, future events, or changes in circumstances except as required by law. The purpose of this content is to explore potential applications of verification technologies within institutional environments. Nothing in this editorial should be interpreted as a guarantee of future performance or a prediction of specific security outcomes.

EMAIL: info@securitymattersltd.com

SOURCE: SMX (Security Matters) Public Limited



View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire

FAQ

What technology did SMX announce on November 21, 2025 to prevent supply‑chain infiltration?

SMX described a system that embeds a molecular identity and provenance into materials so tampering and counterfeits become detectable.

How does SMX say its technology stops physical inputs from causing digital vulnerabilities?

By making origins inseparable from objects, SMX says compromised components can be exposed before they alter data or open digital pathways.

Which materials does SMX claim its system can protect as of November 21, 2025?

SMX listed gold, rubber, liquids, textiles and said virtually any material can benefit from its molecular provenance technology.

Does SMX claim commercial traction or deals in the November 21, 2025 announcement?

The announcement states SMX is gaining deal traction across continents, without providing transaction values or timelines.

What kind of institutions does SMX target with its security offering?

SMX targets companies, institutions, and governments that need to verify material provenance to prevent procedural supply‑chain infiltration.

Will SMX's system trigger traditional cybersecurity alarms according to the November 21, 2025 release?

The release explains threats often evade traditional alarms because they enter as trusted materials, and SMX aims to detect tampering at the physical level.
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