LaunchKC winner Erkios: Hacking attacks will come from inside — Fortifi intellectual property
October 24, 2018 | Austin Barnes
Tinkering with old technology defined childhood for Philip Van Der Straeten, COO of Kansas City tech startup Erkios Systems.

Philip Van Der Straeten, Erkios
Such adventures could one day provide a nationwide payoff for his company, he said.
“Our organization was built by tinkerers and critical thinkers attempting to break things down and get a better grasp of what they entail,” Van Der Straeten said of the way Erkios Systems targets a need that a vast majority of companies don’t even realize they must address: physically securing confidential, digital information shared with employees who eventually exit their positions.
The entrepreneur, along with his band of like-minded teammates — winners of $50,000 in the recent LaunchKC competition — could save companies from crippling, insider attacks on intellectual property with their first product, Fortifi, he said.
A master lock for security, Fortifi by Erkios Systems is a physical device attached to company-owned computers and devices. Fortifi alerts cybersecurity teams to incoming attacks, said Sean Null, the company’s CEO.
“I just assumed that there should’ve been something like [Fortifi] already on the market,” Null said, expressing his amazement. “I was unable to find a solution for [a former employer] so we researched it and decided to invent it.”
Former co-workers, Null and Van Der Straeten once used their tech skills as cybersecurity monitors for a prominent, local utility company where they realized that the common trope of an outside hacker wasn’t always the most realistic threat to a company’s digital presence.
“I have a skill set that can disrupt the power utility for the entire city — and I’m not the only person in America, let alone the world, who can do that,” Null said of the knowledge he obtained while working in the tech trenches of corporate cybersecurity monitoring.
Fortifi could even go so far as to thwart acts of cyberterrorism, Null added.
Made official in May, Fortifi is now a piece of patented technology, he said. It’s a move that opens new doors for Erkios Systems, as the company builds momentum and secures investors.
Competing in LaunchKC was great experience with just the right amount of exposure, Null said.
“It made our offering more attractive to potential investors,” he said. “With local validation, obviously, we’ve got to have something that somebody believes in.”
Erkios Systems is now in investment talks with an unidentified company, Null told Startland, noting a direct correlation to the company’s grant win and participation in LaunchKC during Techweek Kansas City, he said.
Featured Business

2018 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Splitsy takes top prize in Regnier challenge, adding to emerging fintech startup’s spring bump
The Regnier Venture Creation Challenge doled out more than $65,000 in cash prizes to emerging startups this spring, culminating in Friday’s big win for an up-and-coming fintech app. “We had a great competition,” Bryan Boots, managing director of venture creation and assistant teaching professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, told Startland News. The annual…
Missouri House advances pro-entrepreneur bill that would lower taxes on self-starters
A vision to make Missouri more entrepreneur-friendly moved closer to reality Monday as state legislators passed a first-in-the-nation Right To Start Act, advancing the bill to the Senate on an 85-69 vote. “We made progress today to make Missouri a state that welcomes risk takers, the crazy ones, who want to build the next generation…
SafetyCulture rides deeper into unicorn club with $73M round, reaching $1.6B valuation
The evolution from a checklist app into an operations platform for working teams is paying off for SafetyCulture, which Monday announced a massive funding round from the East Coast — pushing the unicorn company even deeper into the realm of startups valued at more than a billion dollars. Led by New York-based Insight Partners, the…
Made in KC goes West: Why the local-first retailer is opening a marketplace (with shuffleboard) in Lenexa
A newly announced Made in KC Marketplace at Lenexa City Center will make local goods — and the makers behind them — more accessible to a fast-developing piece of Kansas City, said Keith Bradley. “Part of our mission as a company is to make shopping local a habit,” said Bradley, co-owner of Made in KC, a…

