List of Palo Alto WildFire Customers
Santa Clara, 95054, CA,
United States
Since 2010, our global team of researchers has been studying Palo Alto WildFire customers around the world, aggregating massive amounts of data points that form the basis of our forecast assumptions and perhaps the rise and fall of certain vendors and their products on a quarterly basis.
Each quarter our research team identifies companies that have purchased Palo Alto WildFire for Threat Modeling from public (Press Releases, Customer References, Testimonials, Case Studies and Success Stories) and proprietary sources, including the customer size, industry, location, implementation status, partner involvement, LOB Key Stakeholders and related IT decision-makers contact details.
Companies using Palo Alto WildFire for Threat Modeling include: Achievement First, a United States based Education organisation with 2400 employees and revenues of $300.0 million, Registers of Scotland, a United Kingdom based Government organisation with 1236 employees and revenues of $113.0 million, SEGA, a United Kingdom based Media organisation with 300 employees and revenues of $50.0 million and many others.
Contact us if you need a completed and verified list of companies using Palo Alto WildFire, including the breakdown by industry (21 Verticals), Geography (Region, Country, State, City), Company Size (Revenue, Employees, Asset) and related IT Decision Makers, Key Stakeholders, business and technology executives responsible for the software purchases.
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| Logo | Customer | Industry | Empl. | Revenue | Country | Vendor | Application | Category | When | SI | Insight |
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Achievement First | Education | 2400 | $300M | United States | Palo Alto Networks | Palo Alto WildFire | Threat Modeling | 2019 | Digital Back Office |
In 2019, Achievement First adopted Palo Alto WildFire as part of a Threat Modeling deployment alongside Palo Alto Networks NGFWs. The deployment was delivered with local partner Digital Back Office and targeted the charter network's education IT and security operations to protect its digital learning platforms in the United States.
The technical implementation combined Palo Alto Networks NGFWs configured with Threat Prevention and the Palo Alto WildFire application, using URL filtering, inline threat prevention, and WildFire sandbox analysis for suspected malicious executables and phishing links. Palo Alto WildFire was used to detonate and analyze suspicious files and URLs, provide automated verdicts, and feed those verdicts back to NGFW enforcement to enable automated blocking and containment.
The solution was integrated with Achievement First's digital learning platforms to intercept phishing links and malicious payloads at network egress and ingress points, with operational ownership assigned to security operations and education IT. Digital Back Office supported deployment, policy tuning, and handover, enabling WildFire verdicts to be consumed by incident triage and policy update workflows.
Governance was updated to incorporate WildFire generated intelligence into incident response and policy change processes, creating a prevention feedback loop between sandbox analysis and network enforcement. The deployment increased visibility and blocked malicious links, helping the charter network maintain learning continuity while scaling its environment.
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Registers of Scotland | Government | 1236 | $113M | United Kingdom | Palo Alto Networks | Palo Alto WildFire | Threat Modeling | 2020 | n/a |
In 2020, Registers of Scotland integrated Palo Alto WildFire into its pandemic-driven digital submission service to malware-scan digitally submitted property registration files. The deployment targeted Threat Modeling for the public registry document processing area, aligning application controls with file intake workflows across Registers of Scotland in Scotland, United Kingdom.
The implementation used the WildFire API to embed automated malware inspection into a document-scanning workflow, enabling pre-ingest analysis and verdict-based gating of registration files. Configuration included automated file submission handling, sandbox-based detonation, and threat intelligence verdicting to block or quarantine suspicious documents before they entered core registration processing.
The integration was built in under three weeks and was integrated directly into the digital intake pipeline, supporting secure processing of thousands of digital registrations per day. Operational scope covered the digital submissions channel for public registry operations, applying threat detection at the moment of upload and routing results into existing document handling processes.
Rollout was executed rapidly to meet pandemic-driven demand with governance focused on automated scanning policies, file-handling workflows, and exception routing for human review. Registers of Scotland reported that digital submissions rose to 94% in 2020–21, with Palo Alto WildFire serving as the Threat Modeling control securing the document intake stream.
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SEGA | Media | 300 | $50M | United Kingdom | Palo Alto Networks | Palo Alto WildFire | Threat Modeling | 2019 | n/a |
In 2019, SEGA implemented Palo Alto WildFire in the Threat Modeling category as part of its Security Operating Platform to detect and prevent zero day malware across its European operations. The engagement explicitly positioned Palo Alto WildFire to support security and IT operations for SEGA's distributed game development studios.
Palo Alto WildFire was configured across NGFWs, delivering sandbox analysis, automated verdicting, and policy enforcement at the network edge. The implementation embedded threat intelligence driven file detonation workflows and automated blocking to shift controls from reactive detection to prevention.
Deployment was completed within roughly a year and covered SEGA's studios in the United Kingdom, aligning incident handling and policy tuning under centralized security operations. Governance and operational workflow changes focused on promoting prevention policies and reducing manual remediation steps in security/IT operations.
According to the vendor case study, the Palo Alto WildFire implementation reduced malware incidents and lowered false positives, marking a transition for SEGA from a detect and remediate posture to a prevention oriented security model.
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