AI startup secures $30M to transform SOC investigations
An emerging cybersecurity company using AI to accelerate security operations has raised $30 million in fresh funding after demonstrating that its platform can cut Security Operations Center (SOC) investigations to as little as three minutes. The round underscores growing investor confidence in automation-driven tools that can keep pace with increasingly complex cyber threats and alert volumes.
The unnamed AI startup focuses on reducing the time required for analysts to investigate, correlate and respond to security alerts across sprawling enterprise environments. By applying machine learning, automated triage and incident correlation, the platform aims to replace hours of manual log review and pivoting between tools with a guided, three-minute investigation workflow.
How AI is reshaping security operations
Traditional SOC teams are overwhelmed by a constant flood of alerts from SIEM and EDR systems, many of which turn out to be false positives. This leads to analyst fatigue, longer mean time to detect (MTTD) and mean time to respond (MTTR), and missed indicators of compromise. The startup’s platform is designed to ingest alerts from multiple sources, enrich them with threat intelligence, and automatically build a narrative around what is happening in the environment.
Using AI algorithms, the system ranks incidents by risk, surfaces likely root causes and recommended remediation steps, and presents analysts with a concise, investigation-ready case. By compressing the investigative process to around three minutes, the company claims it can significantly improve incident response while freeing human experts to focus on truly complex threats.
Funding to scale AI-driven cyber defense
The new $30M investment will be used to expand product development, deepen integrations with leading security platforms, and grow sales and support teams across key markets. Investors are betting that AI-enhanced security automation will become a standard layer in modern SOC architectures as organizations struggle to hire and retain skilled analysts.
With regulatory pressure, rising attack frequency and chronic talent shortages, enterprises are increasingly looking to AI to close the gap. If the startup can consistently deliver three-minute investigations at scale, it is poised to become a critical partner for organizations seeking faster, more reliable cyber defense.

