Andrew Flury

📍 Pacifica, CA, USA✉️ [email protected]📞 650-515-6072📆 Meet🤝 LinkedIn

Summary

Software engineer with over 25 years of expertise in the areas of networking, security, and infrastructure.

Experience

Principal Software Engineer - Memyard 📂 Apr 2024 - present

Memyard is an early-stage startup building a social document intelligence platform integrating Google Drive and other services with LLMs to provide context-aware analytics. I'm currently the company's primary engineer, so my areas of responsibility span from infrastructure to front-end feature development.

Staff Software Engineer - TRM Labs 💸 Nov 2022 - Apr 2024

TRM is a blockchain analytics company that works with cryptocurrency exchanges, government agencies, and other regulators to provide insights into illicit blockchain activity. My team, known internally as Network Intelligence, is responsible for gathering and analyzing data pertaining to blockchains' network interactions while correlating crypto wallets and transactions with networks, IP addresses, and people.

Principal Software Engineer - Agari / Fortra 📧 Sep 2009 – Mar 2022

Agari is an email security company focused on preventing spoofing attacks. We were one of the creators and early proponents of the DMARC (https://dmarc.org) email authentication and reporting standard and provide related SaaS security offerings. I was Agari's first employee and was deeply involved in most facets of engineering, from initial proofs of concepts to production operations and on-call support. The company was acquired by HelpSystems (now Fortra) in 2021.

Agari's Customer Protect product helps senders protect their domains using DMARC, instructing mailbox providers such as Gmail/Microsoft/Yahoo to provide data about email sent on behalf of customer domains, and to enforce customer policies to block messages failing authentication.

Enterprise Protect is Agari's inbound security product. Originally designed to provide similar telemetry into companies' inbound email as Customer Protect does for domains' outbound email, it became a more general email security offering focused on detecting and mitigating abnormal traffic patterns.

Member of Technical Staff - Topsy Labs 🔍 Apr 2007 - Jul 2009

Topsy was a search engine startup focused on searching sentiment on streams of social data (read: Twitter). I was responsible for building the company's early product infrastructure. During my time at the company, we went from running the service under a desk to running a datacenter with dozens of racks of servers. Topsy was acquired by Apple in 2013.

Senior Software Engineer - IronPort Systems 🔐 Jul 2002 - Mar 2007

IronPort was a leading provider of enterprise email and web security appliances and services. It was acquired by Cisco in 2007. When I joined the company in 2002 as a software engineer, the company's primary product was a high-volume outbound email gateway appliance. Shortly thereafter, they changed directions toward inbound email security, and the team I started was responsible for developing and running security-related services.

Systems / Software Engineer - Zembu Labs 🌐 Apr 2001 - Nov 2002

Zembu was an internet infrastructure startup aimed at developing a globally distributed network of application/database servers that would push more dynamic data closer to the user via home-grown distributed database technology. As a systems/software engineer, my area of focus was writing software to manage the underlying systems in "pods", or small clusters, of servers.

Network Engineer - NASA/Ames Research Center 🚀 Jul 1997 - Apr 2001

I joined NASA/Ames as an intern in 1997 to work at their NAS (NASA Advanced Supercomputing) facility. Responsible for building and maintaining networks supporting high-performance computing used for computational fluid dynamics and other scientific applications. Was hired full-time after completing a one-year internship.

Skills

Education

High school education included some college-level curriculum, and college coursework continued through early career (did not earn a degree - hacking on supercomputers at NASA seemed like more fun).