Serverworks is tightening its partnership with CrowdStrike. The focus is clear. The company needs to focus on developing cloud security solutions which will help businesses implement their security systems instead of selling them the tools. The company is developing additional support services for its CrowdStrike Falcon Cloud Security product which operates within the complete CrowdStrike Falcon Platform.
Why this move now? Because cloud risk is no longer theoretical. More companies are running on Amazon Web Services, and the weak point is not always hackers breaking in. It is basic misconfigurations. Wrong permissions, loose access controls, things that look small but blow up fast. Traditional endpoint security does not catch this well, so gaps stay hidden until something breaks.
Serverworks has been working with CrowdStrike since 2025. What is changing now is scale. Demand is going up, and they are building a stronger system to handle full implementation, not just advisory.
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The core offering revolves around five layers working together on one platform. CSPM to catch configuration mistakes in real time. CIEM to clean up access and remove excessive permissions. CWP to monitor workloads across virtual servers, containers, and Kubernetes environments. ASPM to flag application-level risks and keep compliance in check. DSPM to track sensitive data and control how it is accessed.
Put together, this is about pushing DevSecOps from theory into actual workflows. Security is not a separate step anymore. It sits inside development, deployment, and operations.
Serverworks is also tying this with its own managed service ‘SabaSock,’ using its AWS monitoring experience to add another layer of defense. The idea is simple. Do not rely on one checkpoint. Build multiple layers so if one fails, the system still holds.
Nothing flashy here. Just a response to a very real problem. Cloud environments are getting complex, and most breaches still come down to basic mistakes. This partnership is trying to close that gap before it turns into something bigger.


