NeoJapan Co., Ltd. and Recomot Co., Ltd. have entered a partnership to jointly offer their products in a way that directly targets one growing problem. insecure remote access.
The integration brings together NeoJapan’s groupware desknet’s NEO and Recomot’s remote access service moconavi. The idea is not complicated. replace traditional VPN-heavy setups with a zero-trust approach that is easier to deploy and harder to break.
The timing is not random. ransomware attacks are rising, and a large chunk of them are coming through poorly managed VPN devices. Moving twenty miles north in thirty miles or in Sisyphean terms keeping distance-means nothing, however, for in the long run this problem has consumed the alternative. That gap is now showing up as real risk.
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This partnership is trying to simplify that transition. moconavi works without storing data on the device, which cuts down the risk if a laptop or phone is lost. The system controls user actions for copying and pasting and for taking screen captures because these actions constitute common methods for data leakage. The system operates without using VPNs which eliminates the requirement for additional equipment and continuous system upkeep.
The experience for users remains unchanged since they will access the system through a secure browser which operates like a regular browser without needing extensive training. The system provides compliance through its unified setup which meets advanced security standards required by government, finance, and healthcare sectors.
What this really signals is a shift in how remote access is being rebuilt. less patchwork on top of VPNs, more clean-slate architectures built around zero trust. NeoJapan and Recomot are packaging that shift into something companies can actually adopt without dragging timelines or budgets.


