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Contents

Orange Digital Audit

1. Executive Summary

  • Public evidence shows Orange and Orange Business maintain direct, named technology relationships with Check Point, Palo Alto Networks, NICE, and CyberArk across enterprise security, cloud security, managed SASE, customer experience, and infrastructure security offerings.1234567
  • The strongest publicly evidenced operational linkages in the source set concern enterprise security and customer-experience stack integration, including Orange-managed mobile threat protection based on Check Point technology, Orange cloud deployment guidance for Check Point CloudGuard, Orange’s selection of Prisma Cloud for its own cloud expansion, a joint managed SASE offer with Palo Alto Networks, and Orange-branded customer-experience solutions built on NICE CXone.12346
  • Public evidence does not establish Orange contracts, partnerships, or service agreements with Israeli state, military, or intelligence bodies in the reviewed materials.121315
  • Public evidence does not show Orange participating in Project Nimbus or another Israeli sovereign-cloud initiative, and the reviewed international-presence material does not list Israel in Orange’s country footprint.910
  • Public evidence does, however, show a historical Israel-linked innovation and investment footprint, including Orange’s 2015 references to innovation activities through Orange affiliates in Israel, Orange Fab’s 2019 statement that its accelerator was present in Israel, a 2015 reported investment in Israeli start-up Hola, and Orange Digital Investment’s page identifying portfolio exposure to Zeta as an Israeli company.12171819
  • Public evidence also documents significant 2015 civil-society scrutiny and boycott pressure tied to Orange’s former brand-licence relationship with Partner Communications and allegations regarding Partner’s activities in Israeli settlements, followed by a framework to terminate the brand deal.1213141516

2. Enterprise Technology Stack & Vendor Relationships

Check Point

  • In February 2018, Orange Cyberdefense launched a managed service called Mobile Threat Protection based on Check Point SandBlast Mobile, aimed at multinational enterprise mobile fleets.1
  • The launch materials describe the service as managed by Orange and usable either as a standalone service or integrated with enterprise mobility management, which is public evidence of a direct service relationship rather than a passive marketplace listing.1
  • Orange Business also published deployment documentation for Check Point CloudGuard Network Security Gateway on Orange Cloud for Business Flexible Engine, evidencing integration of Check Point network-security controls into Orange cloud offerings.2

Palo Alto Networks

  • Orange Business states it has a “unique cybersecurity partnership” with Palo Alto Networks spanning network, cloud, and AI.3
  • The same partner page states Orange selected Prisma Cloud as its cloud security solution for Orange’s own cloud-computing and storage expansion, which is public evidence of Orange’s internal use of a Palo Alto security platform in its own cloud program.3
  • Orange Business reports on that partner page FY2023/2024 partner revenue of $143 million and new business of $111 million, indicating a relationship of material commercial scale in the period cited.3
  • In June 2023, Orange Business, Orange Cyberdefense, and Palo Alto Networks announced a joint managed SASE offer combining Prisma Access, Prisma SD-WAN, and Orange integration and managed services for enterprise customers.4

NICE

  • Orange Business describes NICE as a “long-standing” strategic partner and states the partnership supports strategic clients worldwide in cloud customer-experience deployments.5
  • Orange Business markets a named offer, Unified Engagement Suite – NICE, built on NICE CXone and the Orange global voice network.6
  • Orange’s description of that offer includes omnichannel routing, customer analytics, workforce engagement, automation, AI, and cloud hosting/connectivity, showing direct solution integration into Orange’s customer-experience portfolio.6

CyberArk

  • An Orange-hosted ISG Provider Lens excerpt states Orange Business is reinforcing cybersecurity capabilities by “proposing CyberArk and Tufin” for end-to-end firewall configuration in infrastructures.7
  • This is public evidence that Orange Business offers or deploys CyberArk within customer cloud/security programs, but the reviewed excerpt does not establish whether CyberArk is used internally by Orange at group-wide scale or how widely it is deployed.7

Broader partner environment and limits of current evidence

  • Orange Business’s 2025 internal transformation announcement identifies ServiceNow, Splunk, Blue Planet, and CSG Quote & Order among major transformation partners, reinforcing Orange’s role as operator, integrator, and platform player in a broad enterprise technology ecosystem.8
  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials shows that those 2025 transformation partners mandated the use of Check Point, Palo Alto Networks, NICE, CyberArk, or other specific Israel-linked technologies in Orange’s internal transformation program.8
  • Public evidence indicates that the documented Check Point, Palo Alto Networks, NICE, and CyberArk relationships are tied to non-peripheral functions such as mobile threat defense, cloud/network security, SASE, customer-experience orchestration, and infrastructure security workflows, but the reviewed sources do not quantify estate-wide dependency, seat counts, spend, or exclusivity across the Orange Group.1234567
  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials for current or recent Orange relationships with Wiz, SentinelOne, Verint, Claroty, Oosto/AnyVision, BriefCam, Trax, or Trigo.578

3. Surveillance, Biometrics & Retail Technology

  • No public evidence identified that Orange currently uses Israeli-origin facial recognition, gait analysis, frictionless checkout, or retail-analytics platforms from vendors such as Trigo, BriefCam, Oosto/AnyVision, or Trax in the reviewed source set.578
  • No public evidence identified that Orange uses Israeli-origin predictive policing, sentiment-analysis, social-media monitoring, or workforce-surveillance platforms in the reviewed source set.58
  • No public evidence identified that those categories reach Orange indirectly through bundled suites or managed providers beyond the already documented relationships with Check Point, Palo Alto Networks, NICE, and CyberArk.1357

4. Cloud Infrastructure, Data Residency & Sovereign Cloud Participation

  • No public evidence identified that Orange operates, leases, or co-locates data-centre infrastructure in Israel in the reviewed corporate international-presence materials.10
  • The reviewed Orange international-presence page does not list Israel in Orange’s country footprint.10
  • Orange Business’s sovereign-cloud activity evidenced in the source set is France-focused: in November 2025, Orange Business announced migration of 70% of its IT infrastructure to Bleu, described as the French trusted-cloud venture owned by Capgemini and Orange, to support government and critical-sector needs and SecNumCloud 3.2 qualification.9
  • No public evidence identified that Orange participates in Project Nimbus or another Israeli state-backed sovereign-cloud initiative.910
  • No public evidence identified that Orange markets or contracts data-sovereignty or resilience services specifically to Israeli state institutions or military bodies in the reviewed materials.910

5. Defence, Intelligence & Security Sector Technology Relationships

  • No public evidence identified of contracts, partnerships, or service agreements between Orange and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, IDF, Israeli intelligence agencies, or other Israeli security bodies in the reviewed sources.121315
  • Orange’s 30 June 2015 framework announcement with Partner Communications stated that Israel is a strategically important country and referred to Orange’s innovation activities through Orange affiliates in Israel, which confirms a commercial and innovation connection at that date but does not evidence state-sector security contracting.12
  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials that Orange’s products or services were confirmed as deployed for Israeli military, intelligence, or law-enforcement surveillance use in Israel or the occupied Palestinian territory.121315
  • No public evidence identified that Orange developed, sold, licensed, or maintained offensive cyber capabilities, zero-day exploit tools, or digital weapons systems for Israeli state actors.3815

6. AI, Algorithmic & Autonomous Systems

  • No public evidence identified that Orange provides AI/ML, computer-vision, or autonomous decision-support systems to Israeli state, military, or security bodies in the reviewed materials.810
  • No public evidence identified that Orange used Israeli or occupied-territory civilian or surveillance datasets for training data or model development in the reviewed materials.1115
  • No public evidence identified that Orange is linked in the reviewed materials to autonomous targeting, autonomous tracking, or lethality-related systems.3811

7. Technology Ecosystem, Innovation Footprint & Investment Exposure

Historical Israel-linked innovation footprint

  • Orange’s 30 June 2015 framework announcement with Partner Communications stated that, if Partner rebranded, all Orange R&D and innovation activities in Israel would be rebranded with the Orange name, and it also said Orange had a “long term commitment” to Israel through innovation activities via Orange affiliates in Israel.12
  • Orange’s 4 June 2015 clarification stated that the Group had “no operational presence in Israel” and only a brand-licence agreement with Partner Communications at that time.14
  • Taken together, the reviewed sources show a historically mixed public record on Orange’s Israel footprint in 2015: one Orange statement said there was no operational presence, while a later framework announcement referenced Orange affiliates in Israel and R&D and innovation activities in Israel.1214

Accelerator and start-up ecosystem presence

  • Orange Business Services stated in October 2019 that Orange Fab was present in dynamic ecosystems including Israel, describing Orange Fab as an international start-up accelerator operating since 2013.17

Investments and portfolio exposure

  • A September 2015 report by the Times of Israel, citing Reuters, said Israeli start-up Hola raised $17 million in a funding round led by a strategic partnership between Orange and Publicis Groupe.18
  • Orange’s Orange Digital Investment page states that its externally managed funds have participated in several unicorns, including Zeta, which Orange identifies as “an Israeli company” offering marketing-technology services based on AI, data, and cloud solutions.19
  • The reviewed evidence supports venture and portfolio exposure to Israeli technology companies, but it does not establish acquisition of those companies or exclusive operational deployment of their products inside Orange.1819

Acquisitions, patents, and academic co-development

  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials that Orange acquired an Israeli-origin technology company.1019
  • No public evidence identified of significant Orange patent portfolios, licensing agreements, or co-development arrangements with Israeli academic institutions such as Technion, Hebrew University, or the Weizmann Institute in the reviewed materials.11

8. Civil Society Scrutiny & Regulatory History

NGO and campaign scrutiny

  • A May 2015 FIDH-led report alleged that Orange, through its relationship with Partner Communications, indirectly contributed to the maintenance and strengthening of Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory, including through telecommunications infrastructure issues documented in the report.15
  • FIDH’s 6 May 2015 announcement summarized that report as denouncing Orange’s business relationship with Partner Communications operating in Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory and noted the French state’s role as Orange’s principal minority shareholder.16
  • Reuters reporting from 30 June 2015 states Orange became the target of boycott and divestment pressure tied to Partner Communications’ activities in settlements that France and the EU considered illegal.13

Orange response and unwind of the Partner relationship

  • On 4 June 2015, Orange said it did not engage in political debate, had no operational presence in Israel, and ultimately wanted to end the brand-licence agreement because Orange generally did not want to maintain its brand in countries where it was not an operator.14
  • On 30 June 2015, Orange and Partner Communications announced a framework allowing termination of the brand-licence agreement and providing for Orange payments to Partner, while Orange simultaneously said Israel remained strategically important and referred to long-term innovation activities there.1213

Regulatory and enforcement record

  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials of export-control actions, sanctions investigations, or regulatory enforcement against Orange relating to technology sales or services to Israeli state entities.121315

9. Evidence Gaps

  • The reviewed public sources do not quantify Orange’s internal dependency on Check Point, Palo Alto Networks, NICE, or CyberArk in terms of licence counts, spend, tenant count, global user count, or whether any of those products are mandatory standards across the entire Orange Group.1357
  • No public procurement records were identified in the reviewed materials showing Orange directly purchasing from Wiz, SentinelOne, Verint, Claroty, BriefCam, Oosto/AnyVision, Trigo, or Trax.578
  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials for Project Nimbus participation, Israeli state cloud contracts, or Israeli government data-residency offerings by Orange.910
  • The reviewed public materials did not yield supportable evidence of Orange contracts with the Israeli MoD, IDF, or intelligence agencies, nor evidence of Orange products being used for Israeli military surveillance, autonomous targeting, or offensive cyber applications.121315
  • The exact legal entities, dates, and scale of Orange’s historical affiliates and innovation activities in Israel are not resolved by the reviewed sources, which contain mixed 2015 public statements on Orange’s presence there.1214
  • No public evidence identified in the reviewed materials of Orange patent co-development or licensing with Israeli universities or research institutes.11

End Notes


  1. https://www.orange-business.com/sites/default/files/PR-Mobile_Threat_Protection-EN.pdf 

  2. https://cloud.orange-business.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Check-Point-Cloudguard-Network-Security-Gateway-on-OCB-Flexible-Engine-v1.3.pdf 

  3. https://www.orange-business.com/en/about-us/partners/palo-alto-networks 

  4. https://www.orange-business.com/en/press/orange-business-orange-cyberdefense-palo-alto-networks-join-forces-deliver-cloud-native 

  5. https://www.orange-business.com/en/about-us/partners/nice 

  6. https://www.orange-business.com/en/solutions/customer-experience/unified-engagement-suite-nice 

  7. https://www.orange-business.com/sites/default/files/hybrid-cloud-france-customize-full-length.pdf 

  8. https://www.orange-business.com/en/press/orange-business-accelerates-its-digital-transformation-leading-technology-partners-deliver 

  9. https://www.orange-business.com/en/press/orange-business-announces-migration-its-it-infrastructure-bleu 

  10. https://www.orange.com/en/our-group/our-international-presence 

  11. https://www.orange.com/en/our-group/our-innovation-approach/research 

  12. https://www.hnklaw.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/PR_Orange_Partner_Israel_EN_300615_v2.pdf 

  13. https://www.investing.com/news/technology-news/orange%2C-partner-communications-set-terms-to-end-brand-deal-348854 

  14. https://www.telecomtv.com/content/industry-announcements/orange-clarifies-its-position-with-regards-to-its-brand-licence-agreement-with-partner-communications-16916/ 

  15. https://www.fidh.org/IMG/pdf/rapport_orange-eng.pdf 

  16. https://www.fidh.org/en/impacts/occupied-palestinian-territory-new-report-denounces-orange-s 

  17. https://www.orange-business.com/sites/default/files/pr_orange-fab_expands-in-russia_eng_241019.pdf 

  18. https://www.timesofisrael.com/french-firm-orange-invests-in-israeli-start-up/ 

  19. https://www.orange.com/en/orange-digital-investment-oranges-investment-holding-company-dedicated-innovation 

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