Knostic celebrates an $11 million
investment to secure enterprise large language models (LLMs). The
funding will be used to bolster Knostic's offering, supporting
enterprises in their AI transformation and adding a customizable safety
layer to tools such as Microsoft 365 Copilot and Glean. This additional
round brings the company's total funding to date to $14 million.
"The problem is that these tools just can't keep a secret, lacking
the ability to discern what's appropriate, in what context - think
bonuses, sales revenue, mergers and acquisition information and more,"
said Gadi Evron, co-founder and CEO of
Knostic. "Businesses can't adopt these tools without Knostic and we're
grateful our investors recognize this."
This funding round was led by Bright Pixel Capital
with follow-on investments from new and previous investors such as
Silicon Valley CISO Investments (SVCI), DNX Ventures, Seedcamp, and
angel investors Kevin Mahaffey (founder of Lookout), and Gerhard Eschelbeck (former CISO of Google) among others.
"In this era of rapid digital transformation, it's rare
to find a board that isn't asking about AI, yet attempts to keep LLMs
in check have failed time and time again," said Fernando Martins,
Director of Cybersecurity at Bright Pixel Capital. "Enterprises who
want to use LLMs for their benefit need Knostic to lock down information
- it's that simple. We're energized by the major demand Gadi and his
team are already seeing, and we're eager to support them as their
customer base expands even further."
"At SVCI, the CISO members
devote considerable time and effort to evaluating specific segments of
the cybersecurity market before deciding to partner and invest in a
company. While the intersection of AI and security is broad, access
control remains one of the most significant risks. As companies
accelerate AI adoption at the board level, Knostic's need-to-know
technology plays a crucial role in facilitating this transformation. As a
result, we, at SVCI chose to back Knostic," said Shaun Marion, CISO at Xcel Energy, previously with McDonald's, and one of the CISO investors in SVCI.
Knostic
serves as a safety net for LLM tools, earning recognition at the
industry's top tradeshows. Shortly after its market debut, the company
was named as a Launch Pad winner at the 2024 RSA Conference and the 2024 Black Hat Startup Spotlight Competition, the only startup to ever be nominated and win both.
"Unlike
traditional access controls, which limit our options to just allowing
or denying access, need-to-know policies enable LLM answers that can be
reshaped to fit within the user's own business context," explained
Sounil Yu, co-founder and CTO of Knostic. "Need-to-know boundaries allow
enterprises to accelerate their AI adoption without compromising
security."
"LLM oversharing is a huge problem that enterprises really need to pay attention to," shared Adm. Mike Rogers
(Ret.), Knostic advisory board member and former NSA Director. "In a
world of heightened awareness around data privacy (and thus negative
repercussions for disregarding it), Knostic's technology is crucial for
enterprises looking to avoid reputational, legal and financial harm as
AI becomes a strategic imperative."