LogRhythm teaming up with The National Museum of Computing at Bletchley
![Kev Eley, VP UKI & Europe at LogRhythm and Jacqui Garrad at The National Museum of Computing - picture contributed](https://thebusinessmagazine.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/Kev-Eley-VP-UKI-Europe-at-LogRhythm-and-Jacqui-Garrad-Museum-Director-at-The-National-Museum-of-Computing.jpeg)
Cybersecurity group LogRhythm is sponsoring The National Museum of Computing (TNMoC) at Bletchley park in a bid to support education in computing and preserve the technological heritage at the Milton Keynes site.
TNMoC is home to the world's largest collection of working historic computers, including the Enigma, Lorenz the working Turing-Welchman Bombe, and the rebuilt Colossus.
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LogRhythm aims to inspire future generations to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) and recently held its Customer Advisory Council and Partner Advisory Council at the museum as part of the ongoing collaboration.
"As soon as I stepped through the doors, I knew TNMoC was a good fit for LogRhythm. As the birthplace of British cybersecurity, it truly brings the history of computing to life and understands the importance of making the field accessible to everyone," said Kev Eley, vice-president (VP0 UKI and Europe at LogRhythm.
"This is something that is central to our values at LogRhythm as we look to inspire new talent within the cybersecurity industry.
"Cybersecurity has become a critical part of the modern digital landscape and will continue to be as threats evolve. I look forward to working together with TNMoC to bridge the gap between industry and education partners through our sponsorship."
LogRhythm helps security teams stop breaches by turning disconnected data and signals into trustworthy insights. Its sophisticated machine learning spots suspicious anomalies in network traffic and user behaviour.