Introduction
From March 18 to 20, Tynapse participated in eGiSEC 2026, Asia's largest information security exhibition. Over three days, we spoke directly with practitioners from financial institutions, public agencies, and security solution companies — and confirmed the real-world demand for AI security on the ground. In this post, we share our experience at eGiSEC and the stories we heard firsthand.
eGiSEC 2026: Where Security Practitioners Converge
eGiSEC is Asia's largest annual information security exhibition. This year, the event drew a cumulative 26,000 visitors over three days, with participating companies and institutions from 19 countries. Security leads and technology decision-makers from finance, government, manufacturing, healthcare, and other industries gathered — making it far more than a trade show. It's the single most concentrated read on real demand in the security market. Tynapse set up a booth in the startup zone and opened the floor for direct conversations with visitors.


The Needs We Encountered
The visitors who stopped by our booth over three days were diverse. Some came already knowing about us, but many others paused simply because our booth caught their eye. Dozens of teams visited daily, and brief conversations often turned into extended discussions.

Financial subsidiary security leads, enterprise technology executives, government information security teams — practitioners who had either already begun or were preparing to adopt AI. Their roles and industries differed, but one concern came up again and again:
"We want to use AI, but we don't know how to explain or take responsibility when something goes wrong."
Tynapse is building an AI security solution that detects risks in enterprise AI operations and traces and explains why each decision was made. It was the moment we confirmed that the concerns we heard on the ground align directly with what we're building.
Closing Thoughts
eGiSEC 2026 was the first time Tynapse set up a booth and formally introduced itself to the Korean security market. The concerns we heard firsthand from practitioners in a venue of 26,000 visitors will be reflected in the product we're building.
Since the exhibition, we've continued follow-up meetings with several teams, and the industry-specific needs we gathered on-site will inform our product direction going forward. Tynapse will keep pushing to help enterprises operate AI more safely.
