Dell Technologies has begun offering commercial laptops with built-in ransomware protection in South Africa. This follows a partnership with US-based cybersecurity firm Halcyon, making it the first PC manufacturer to offer this as an integrated, optional add-on at purchase.
The feature is available on Dell’s Pro and Pro Max commercial laptops, which launched locally in January 2026. Businesses that purchase these devices can add Halcyon’s anti-ransomware software at the point of sale, giving them AI-powered protection against one of the most damaging forms of cyberattack from the moment they set up the machine.
The timing is not accidental. South Africa’s cybersecurity situation is worsening. According to international security firm Palo Alto Networks, an organisation in the country is breached by a threat actor every three hours. The country’s Information Regulator receives 284 breach notifications from major entities every month.

In April, it emerged that a threat actor had infiltrated Standard Bank’s internal systems and quietly extracted 1.2 terabytes of confidential customer data over three weeks, then demanded R1.2 million, roughly $66,000, in Bitcoin. When no payment was received, the attacker began publicly leaking the stolen data.
Ransomware attacks work by getting inside a company’s systems, stealing sensitive files, encrypting everything so the business cannot access its own data, and then demanding payment for the decryption key. Companies that refuse to pay often lose access to critical systems for days or weeks, face legal liability for exposed customer data, and suffer serious reputational damage.
A hospital that cannot access patient records, a logistics company locked out of its dispatch systems, or a retailer unable to process transactions, these are the kinds of disruptions ransomware causes in practice.


How Halcyon’s protection works on Dell laptops
Halcyon’s software is built exclusively for ransomware, not general-purpose antivirus, which allows it to detect attack patterns earlier and more precisely than broader security tools.
The system works across the entire attack chain. It monitors for privilege escalation attempts, which is how attackers typically gain deeper control of a system after the initial breach. It also watches for signs that data is being secretly copied and moved out of the network, a stage that often happens before the encryption begins.
If an attacker still manages to start encrypting files, Halcyon intercepts the encryption keys during the attack, potentially allowing organisations to recover data without paying a ransom or relying on backups that may themselves have been compromised.
“Because Halcyon is focused exclusively on ransomware, we can detect it early in the attack chain using highly tuned AI and behavioural models,” the company said.
Dell said the partnership represents a direct response to the growing sophistication of attacks targeting businesses. “Ransomware attacks are growing in number and sophistication, disrupting finances, damaging reputations, and causing significant downtime.”


South Africa is currently the only confirmed African market where the Dell and Halcyon combination is available. The protection is supported on Latitude, OptiPlex, Precision, XPS, Dell Pro, and Dell Pro Max devices running Intel or AMD processors. This protection is currently not supported on devices powered by Qualcomm or ARM-based processors.
Businesses purchasing the solution should order directly from Dell’s official online store, as third-party distributors may not carry it. Installation requires completing an intake form and is recommended to be handled by an IT administrator. The device is not protected until the setup process is complete.
Similar read: Lagos-based AI cybersecurity startup, Cybervergent secures $3M seed funding





