Israeli cybersecurity startup Seal Security raised $13 million in Series A funding. Vertex Ventures Israel Ltd. led the round, with More Investments Ltd., SBI Holdings Inc., and CCL Industries Inc. also participating. This Seal Security funding will accelerate go-to-market efforts and expand its core vulnerability remediation platform.
Founded in 2021, Seal Security offers application security focused on eliminating open-source component vulnerabilities. Specifically, the platform provides automated, production-ready patching. Furthermore, it leverages large language models to create an automated pipeline, increasing patching capacity.
Advancing AI-Powered Vulnerability Remediation
Consequently, Seal Security's service delivers security patches across multiple programming languages. Indeed, it remediates over 95% of critical and high-severity vulnerabilities. Moreover, the platform offers automatic curation and remediation of open-source code, complete with ready-to-deploy patches. This approach resolves security issues across application dependencies, operating systems, and container base images.
The company adopts a patching-first strategy, thereby reducing risk without altering developer workflows. Organizations can take immediate action, often remediating critical issues within minutes. In contrast, this differs from traditional vulnerability scanners, which primarily flag issues. Additionally, the platform helps DevSecOps and IT teams improve cybersecurity operations.
Seal Security aims to remove the burden of managing large vulnerability backlogs. As a result, organizations using the platform achieve immediate value by resolving critical vulnerabilities rapidly. Furthermore, the company offers a 72-hour Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures remediation service level agreement. Unlike some competitors like Snyk or Mend.io, Seal focuses heavily on automated remediation.
The platform supports compliance frameworks including PCI DSS, FedRAMP, DORA, and NYDFS requirements. This Seal Security funding also enhances its ability to serve organizations in highly regulated environments. Seal Security's use of artificial intelligence is central to its automated approach.
