Hancom said on Monday it signed an MOU with remote web isolation (RBI) security specialist Aircode (AIRCODE) to serve as a distributor of the remote web isolation security solution AirRBI.
Hancom plans to combine its nationwide authorised partner ecosystem built across the public, education, enterprise and SMB sectors with Aircode’s technology to strengthen its push into public and private security markets.
According to the company, AirRBI runs web browsing on remote servers rather than on users’ PCs to help block the inflow of malware and ransomware.
It adds CDR (content disarm and reconstruction), which removes threats from attachments coming in via the web, and DLP (data loss prevention), which prevents leaks of personal information and important data when using generative AI, providing a multi-layer defence system.
AirRBI also uses “hybrid streaming” technology that mixes static and real-time screen methods to help reduce infrastructure resources such as server resources and network traffic compared with video streaming-based virtualised work environments.
The cooperation also ties in with Hancom’s “sovereign agentic OS” strategy announced in May. The sovereign agentic OS is an integrated AI agent operating system that connects and controls internal organisational data, external AI models and business systems in a single secure environment.
Hancom said the National Network Security Framework (N2SF), formally unveiled in September 2025, takes Zero Trust as its core security principle and that web isolation (RBI) is a key implementation technology that meets those requirements, with adoption rising in the public sector. It said it will proactively respond to such policy-driven demand through its partner network.