Pardisco is an Iranian enterprise storage provider with a documented Open-E Platinum partnership and a modest routing footprint (AS212076). Public evidence confirms its identity, vendor channel, and IP presence but lacks independent financial, ownership, and customer-scale data. Watchpoints include partner tier, routing changes, certified engineer count, and any public registry updates. Major gaps remain around corporate governance and exact customer exposure.
Pardisco sells, integrates, and supports enterprise storage and virtualization solutions, primarily based on Open-E JovianDSS, to Iranian clients. Its public operating surface includes its Open-E partner status, certified engineers, and a single-homed internet routing footprint under AS212076.
Organizations in Iran’s government, financial, and industrial sectors may rely on Pardisco’s storage continuity features. Changes in its vendor partnership or routing posture can signal capability shifts or service risks, making its public partnership and routing status an early warning indicator for downstream service degradation.
Organizations in Iran’s government, financial, and industrial sectors may rely on Pardisco’s storage continuity features. Changes in its vendor partnership or routing posture can signal capability shifts or service risks, making its public partnership and routing status an early warning indicator for downstream service degradation.
Pardisco sells, integrates, and supports enterprise storage and virtualization solutions, primarily based on Open-E JovianDSS, to Iranian clients. Its public operating surface includes its Open-E partner status, certified engineers, and a single-homed internet routing footprint under AS212076.
Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
Pardisco is an Iranian enterprise storage provider with a documented Open-E Platinum partnership and a modest routing footprint (AS212076). Public evidence confirms its identity, vendor channel, and IP presence but lacks independent financial, ownership, and customer-scale data. Watchpoints include partner tier, routing changes, certified engineer count, and any public registry updates. Major gaps remain around corporate governance and exact customer exposure.
Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
| 0.90–1.00 | A | High — direct sources |
| 0.75–0.89 | A/B | Strong |
| 0.55–0.74 | B/C | Medium |
| 0.35–0.54 | C/D | Weak–medium |
| 0.10–0.34 | D | Weak signal |
| 0.00–0.09 | D | Internal monitoring |
Several public sources
Pardisco
Pardisco is an Iranian enterprise storage and virtualization provider operating under Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company. It is certified as an Open-E Platinum Partner and publicly visible via its autonomous system AS212076. The company claims to serve critical national sectors, but independent verification of its customer base, revenue, and ownership is absent.
Why It Matters
Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
What Public Sources Show
Pardisco is the public brand of Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company, an Iranian firm that sells enterprise storage and virtualization systems. It holds an Open-E Platinum Partner certification and deploys Open-E JovianDSS, a storage software with failover and snapshot capabilities. Public sources indicate the company has operated since around 2010 from a Tehran office.
Its identity is anchored in multiple publicly verifiable records. The RIPE NCC member directory lists the full legal name and an Iran service area. Open-E’s partner page confirms the Platinum tier and names two certified engineers. A 2024 vendor blog post validates a certified HP all‑flash cluster designed for high availability. These records establish Pardisco as a legitimate channel partner.
The company’s operating surface includes its relationship with Open‑E and its internet routing footprint. AS212076, registered to the firm, originates the IPv4 prefix 185.231.65.0/24 and depends on a single upstream, AS43754, for global connectivity. That dependency concentrates risk: if the upstream connection fails or the prefix is withdrawn, Pardisco’s own services and any customer workloads relying on that connectivity could be disrupted.
Pardisco’s website claims over 150 successful projects and lists customers across government, finance, oil and gas, and other critical Iranian sectors. However, no independent procurement records, case studies, or customer references have been verified. These assertions remain company‑published and should be treated as unconfirmed until corroborated by third‑party sources.
The impact mechanism for external observers is twofold. First, organizations that depend on Pardisco’s storage systems for continuity features could experience extended downtime if the firm loses its Open‑E partnership or its certified engineers. Second, AS212076 provides a narrow but public indicator of the company’s network health: prefix withdrawal, BGP instability, or changes in the upstream relationship are early warnings.
Concrete watchpoints include any degradation of the Open‑E partner tier, a drop in the number of listed certified engineers, or the disappearance of the certified‑server listing. On the routing side, watch for termination or re‑allocation of 185.231.65.0/24, a shift in the upstream from AS43754, or the appearance of new BGP peers that could indicate a change in business posture.
Significant uncertainties remain. No public corporate registry extract shows Pardisco’s ownership, directors, or financials. The RIPE record lists a UK postal address, while operations are in Tehran, creating a jurisdictional ambiguity. Without audited revenue or verified customer scale, the full extent of its market presence and resilience is unknown. These gaps limit the confidence of any dependency assessment.
Operating Surface
Pardisco sells, integrates, and supports enterprise storage and virtualization solutions, primarily based on Open-E JovianDSS, to Iranian clients. Its public operating surface includes its Open-E partner status, certified engineers, and a single-homed internet routing footprint under AS212076.
Organizations in Iran’s government, financial, and industrial sectors may rely on Pardisco’s storage continuity features. Changes in its vendor partnership or routing posture can signal capability shifts or service risks, making its public partnership and routing status an early warning indicator for downstream service degradation.
Watchpoints
Pardisco’s observable control points are narrow, making its operational health highly sensitive to changes in the Open-E partnership and AS212076 routing. Without visibility into its ownership or finances, any assessment of its long-term resilience is speculative. The concentration of both vendor and upstream dependencies creates a single point of failure that could cascade to its claimed government and industrial customers.
Monitor for any downgrade in Open-E partner tier, removal of certified engineers or servers, withdrawal of 185.231.65.0/24, or a change in the upstream ASN. The appearance of a new upstream or peer could indicate a diversification strategy that reduces risk. Conversely, persistent BGP instability without a new upstream would signal distress.
Audited revenue and ownership records are the most impactful gaps. A corporate registry extract, if available, would clarify the control structure. Independent verification of the claimed >150 projects and customer sectors would allow a more accurate dependency assessment. The jurisdictional ambiguity of the UK vs. Tehran address also merits resolution.
Sources
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record - public-source identity and registry context for Pardisco.
- RIPE registry record - RIPE’s member directory lists Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company and shows Iran as the area serviced.
- open-e.com - Open-E lists Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis as a Platinum Partner for Open-E JovianDSS with distributor, reseller and system-builder services, plus certified engineer and certified-server references.
- pardisco.co - Pardisco’s own about page describes the company’s storage, virtualization, information-security, training and support work and identifies its Tehran operating office.
- pardisco.co - Pardisco’s Open-E product page says the company supplies Open-E DSS V7 and Open-E Jovian, has more than 10 years of storage experience and cites more than 150 successful projects in Iran.
- bgp.tools - bgp.tools identifies AS212076 as Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company, registered under RIPE, active, with one IPv4 originated prefix and AS43754 as an upstream.
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record - IPIP WHOIS presents AS212076 as Pardisco, gives the organisation name Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company, and lists IPv4 and IPv6 range details with RIPE WHOIS text.
- ipinfo.io - IPinfo identifies AS212076 as Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company, links it to pardisco.co, RIPE, Iran, a hosting ASN classification, and the 185.231.65.0/24 range.
- radar.cloudflare.com - Cloudflare Radar’s AS212076 overview identifies the ASN as Pardisco with Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company as an AKA and Iran as the country context.
- open-e.com - Open-E’s certified-server page identifies the Pardis HP DL380 Gen10 HA All-Flash Cluster by Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis as certified for Open-E JovianDSS and describes storage-continuity features such as snapshots and failover.
- open-e.com - Open-E’s April 24, 2024 blog post says Open-E certified a solution in partnership with Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis and describes the Pardis HP DL380 Gen10 HA All-Flash Cluster as certified for Open-E JovianDSS.
- pardisco.co - Pardisco's customer page lists claimed customers across government, municipalities, aviation, utilities, finance, oil and gas, healthcare, education and industrial sectors.
Domain of operation
Pardisco is an Iranian enterprise storage and virtualization provider operating under Dadeh Rayanesh Abri Pardis Private Joint Stock Company. It is certified as an Open-E Platinum Partner and publicly visible via its autonomous system AS212076. The company claims to serve critical national sectors, but independent verification of its customer base, revenue, and ownership is absent.
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record: public-source identity and registry context for Pardisco. Evidence basis: source-63c087d6079b
Timeline
- Pardisco public evidence observed
Organizations in Iran’s government, financial, and industrial sectors may rely on Pardisco’s storage continuity features. Changes in its vendor partnership or routing posture can signal capability shifts or service risks, making its public partnership and routing status an early warning indicator for downstream service degradation.
At A Glance
- Name: Pardisco
- Type: Network-related institution
- Base: Iran
- Profile focus: Institution
What It Does
- public operating records
- official service pages
- source-backed relationship updates
Why It Matters
- Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
- Operational criticality: Medium
- Time horizon: Next quarter
What To Watch
- official company sources
- public registries
- operator-published records
Track verified source updates, role changes, and current public evidence.
Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
Longer-term relevance depends on verified operating, policy, and relationship changes.
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Customers dependent on Pardisco’s failover and backup solutions could face extended downtime if the company loses its Open-E partnership, certified engineers, or internet connectivity. The AS212076 prefix is a network-level canary: its withdrawal or instability would directly threaten service continuity for dependent high-reliability sectors.
Watchpoints
- Pardisco’s observable control points are narrow, making its operational health highly sensitive to changes in the Open-E partnership and AS212076 routing.
- Without visibility into its ownership or finances, any assessment of its long-term resilience is speculative.
- The concentration of both vendor and upstream dependencies creates a single point of failure that could cascade to its claimed government and industrial customers.
Caveats
- Public evidence is used only for source-backed claims.
- Private control or contract claims require separate public support.
FAQ
Why does BTW track Pardisco?
Organizations in Iran’s government, financial, and industrial sectors may rely on Pardisco’s storage continuity features. Changes in its vendor partnership or routing posture can signal capability shifts or service risks, making its public partnership and routing status an early warning indicator for downstream service degradation.
What evidence supports the profile?
public-source identity and registry context for Pardisco.
What should readers watch next?
Pardisco’s observable control points are narrow, making its operational health highly sensitive to changes in the Open-E partnership and AS212076 routing.






