Phosphorus is looking for a Device Engineer to join our highly-regarded Engineering team. At Phosphorus, we live and breathe IoT. We love building products to help our customers manage and secure their known/unknown IoT devices. Phosphorus delivers managed or on-prem solutions to match our customer’s deployment needs. Phosphorus is riddled with security industry experts who know the value of staying ahead of the security landscape to create powerful products that integrate with existing systems. We strive for our product to seamlessly interact with a customer’s current security operations. Come join us and have a significant influence on a high-impact product.
This position is based in Nashville, TN. Must be within a commutable distance of the office. We offer paid relocation!
Responsibilities:
Setting up and configuring IoT devices
Reverse engineering IoT devices
Analyzing new IoT devices
Building support for IoT devices into our product
Collaborate with multi-functional teams worldwide
About You:
Skilled at developing and debugging in JavaScript (Node.js)
Understanding of network transport layers (IPv4, routing, forwarding, TCP/UDP and application layer protocols (aka SNMP, HTTP, TLS, uPNP, DNS, SOAP, etc)
Has strong communication skills and a natural inclination to collaborate
Experience reverse engineering
Works best on small high impact teams
Experienced with relational databases
Familiar with Unix/Linux environments
About us:
Phosphorus Cybersecurity® is the leading xTended Security of Things™ platform designed to secure the rapidly growing and often unmonitored Things across the enterprise xIoT landscape. Our Enterprise xIoT Security Platform delivers Attack Surface Management, Hardening & Remediation, and Detection & Response to bring enterprise xIoT security to every cyber-physical Thing in your enterprise environment. With unrivaled xIoT discovery and posture assessment, Phosphorus automates the remediation of the biggest IoT, OT, and Network device vulnerabilities—including unknown and inaccurate asset inventory, out-of-date firmware, default credentials, risky configurations, and out-of-date certificates.
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