BitSight buys dark web security specialist Cybersixgill for $115M

6 days ago 18
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More consolidation is afoot in the world of cybersecurity. BitSight, the startup last valued at $2.4 billion when ratings firm Moody’s took a majority stake in the business in 2021, is acquiring Cybersixgill for $115 million.

Boston-based BitSight’s focus is cyber risk management. It works with enterprises to assess their risk profiles and specifically the likelihood that they will be breached, which covers not just evaluating a company’s attack surface across its network and other digital assets, but also the products that it uses to defend these.

Cybersixgill will give BitSight another level of visibility in that effort: the smaller startup specifically analyzes dark web activity to proactively look for data leaks and indicators of potential breaches and new techniques. The collective area it focuses on is called “cyber threat intelligence” and it says it covers invite-only messaging groups, code repositories, paste sites, and clear web platforms.

Both companies lean heavily on AI in their work, and it sounds like they will complement each other in terms of what they cover.  

The smaller company, based out of Israel, originally launched as Sixgill and had raised just under $56 million with investors including CrowdStrike, Terra Venture and OurCrowd, per PitchBook data. But PitchBook also notes that the startup was last valued, in 2022, at just over $162 million. Cybersecurity has been a white-hot area of the market for funding in the last couple of years, but rising tides to not lift all paper boats.

The deal will come with more money put into the tech that Cybersixgill was building. “We’re committed to investing in Cybersixgill’s industry-leading products and will continue to drive innovation to bring even greater value to customers,” said Steve Harvey, CEO of Bitsight, in a canned statement. The company is bringing on both the team and the tech.

Ingrid is a writer and editor for TechCrunch, joining February 2012, based out of London.


 

Before TechCrunch, Ingrid worked at paidContent.org, where she was a staff writer, and has in the past also written freelance regularly for other publications such as the Financial Times. Ingrid covers mobile, digital media, advertising and the spaces where these intersect.


 

When it comes to work, she feels most comfortable speaking in English but can also speak Russian, Spanish and French (in descending order of competence).

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