Exein, an Italian company focused on embedded cybersecurity, has added €100 million in new funding as it pushes ahead with international growth, according to a report by EU-Startups. The raise underscores intensifying investor and enterprise attention on device-level security at a time when connected products—from industrial controllers to consumer electronics—are expanding faster than the defenses designed to protect them.
Why Exein’s €100 million matters for device security
Unlike traditional security tools that sit on servers or endpoints such as laptops, embedded cybersecurity targets the software and firmware running inside devices themselves. That includes the operating systems and components that power IoT sensors, routers, smart appliances, medical devices, vehicles, and industrial systems. These products often remain in the field for years, are difficult to patch, and can be constrained by limited memory and processing power—conditions that make standard security approaches harder to deploy.
The added €100 million signals confidence that protecting devices “from the inside” is becoming a core requirement rather than an optional upgrade. As regulation tightens and supply chains digitize, manufacturers are increasingly expected to prove that security is built in, not bolted on after deployment.
What Exein builds: security designed to live inside products
Exein operates in a category that is gaining momentum as enterprises confront the reality that many breaches begin at the edge—through a compromised device, a vulnerable module, or an unpatched component embedded in a larger system. Embedded protections typically focus on capabilities such as runtime monitoring, anomaly detection, and prevention mechanisms that can function within the constraints of device hardware.
For manufacturers, the appeal is straightforward: a security layer integrated into the device can help reduce the risk of field failures, product recalls, reputational damage, and downstream liability. For industrial customers, embedded security can also support resilience goals by limiting lateral movement when one device is compromised.
From compliance pressure to customer demand
Security expectations are being pushed upward by both customers and regulators. Across Europe and beyond, product makers face growing scrutiny over how they manage vulnerabilities, deliver updates, and document security practices throughout a device’s lifecycle. That creates a market tailwind for vendors offering solutions that can be integrated early in product development and maintained over time.
In practice, embedded security can also become a commercial differentiator. Buyers of connected products—particularly in industrial and critical environments—are increasingly asking vendors to demonstrate secure-by-design principles, provide transparency about components, and show how incidents would be detected and handled.
How Exein may use the new funding
While the report highlights the €100 million addition and ongoing global expansion, funding at this scale typically supports several parallel priorities for a company operating in a fast-moving security market:
- International go-to-market expansion: building sales, partnerships, and support capabilities closer to customers in key regions.
- Product development: improving detection and prevention features, expanding compatibility across chipsets and operating systems, and strengthening device management workflows.
- Talent growth: hiring engineers and security specialists to keep pace with evolving threats and customer requirements.
- Industry partnerships: deepening integration with manufacturers, platform providers, and supply-chain stakeholders that influence how security is embedded at scale.
For embedded security vendors, the path to scale often hinges on distribution: getting designed into devices early, becoming part of reference architectures, and proving reliability across large fleets. Capital can accelerate that process by funding integrations, certifications, and customer success operations that reduce friction for manufacturers.
The market context: connected devices are multiplying faster than defenses
The funding arrives as organizations grapple with a growing attack surface driven by connected hardware. Enterprises have spent years hardening cloud infrastructure and corporate endpoints, yet many still lack consistent visibility into the devices operating in factories, offices, logistics networks, and homes.
That gap has become harder to ignore for three reasons:
- Scale: device fleets can run into the tens or hundreds of thousands, making manual security practices unrealistic.
- Longevity: embedded systems often stay deployed for years, and patching cycles can be slow or disruptive.
- Supply-chain complexity: devices incorporate third-party components and open-source software, increasing the risk of inherited vulnerabilities.
As a result, security teams are looking for solutions that can provide continuous monitoring and enforce protections directly on devices, even when connectivity is limited or when centralized controls are insufficient.
Embedded security meets real-world constraints
One reason embedded security is difficult is also why it is valuable: many devices operate with tight resource constraints, in remote locations, or in environments where downtime is costly. A workable approach must be lightweight, stable, and compatible with a wide range of hardware and software stacks. Vendors that can deliver that reliability—while also meeting enterprise expectations around reporting and incident response—stand to benefit as the category matures.
What to watch next for Exein
With €100 million added to its funding, Exein will likely face heightened expectations on execution. The most telling signals in the coming months will be commercial and operational: new enterprise or manufacturing partnerships, expanded regional footprints, and product milestones that demonstrate the solution can be deployed across diverse device ecosystems.
Another key indicator will be how the company positions itself amid converging security requirements. Embedded security increasingly touches product engineering, compliance, supply-chain risk, and post-deployment device management. Vendors that can speak credibly to all of these stakeholders—and integrate smoothly into existing development pipelines—tend to win long-term placements.
For Europe’s cybersecurity ecosystem, the raise also reinforces a broader trend: capital is flowing toward specialized security layers that address modern infrastructure where computing is distributed, physical, and always on. As global expansion continues, Exein now has a larger war chest to compete for a role at the foundation of how connected products are secured.
Dailyza will continue tracking the company’s next moves as embedded security becomes a frontline issue for manufacturers and enterprises worldwide.

