• Venice Security on Wednesday emerged from stealth mode with $33 million in funding for its adaptive enterprise privileged access management platform.The company, formerly named Valkyrie, has operations in Tel Aviv and New York. • It focuses on eliminating standing privilege by default to enhance security in complex enterprise settings.The total investment includes a recent $25 million Series A funding round led by IVP, with participation from Index Ventures, Vine Ventures, Holly Ventures, and angel investors.Venice Securityoffers a platform that provides unified control over access points in hybrid environments, including cloud, on-premises, and SaaS systems.The system discovers identities and entitlements, granting access only when required and revoking it immediately after.It includes dynamic policies that adapt in real time to changes in user behavior or environmental conditions, requiring no agents or proxies for deployment.Advertisement. • Scroll to continue reading.“The way organisations manage access isn’t keeping up with how business operates today,” stated Rotem Lurie, co-founder and CEO of Venice.“Teams move faster, environments shift constantly, and AI is accelerating operations across the enterprise and threat actors. • Access control needs to match that tempo. • Venice is on a mission to provide real-time access, granted only when required, and removed the moment it’s not,” Lurie, who previously served as head of product atAxis Security, added.Related:Cogent Security Raises $42 Million for AI-Driven Vulnerability ManagementRelated:VulnCheck Raises $25 Million in Series B Funding to Scale Vulnerability IntelligenceRelated:Nucleus Raises $20 Million for Exposure ManagementRelated:GitGuardian Raises $50 Million for Secrets and Non-Human Identity Security The company, formerly named Valkyrie, has operations in Tel Aviv and New York. • It focuses on eliminating standing privilege by default to enhance security in complex enterprise settings.The total investment includ

Article Summaries:

  • Venice Security, formerly Valkyrie, has exited stealth mode after raising $33 million for its adaptive privileged access management (PAM) platform. The round, led by IVP with participation from Index Ventures, Vine Ventures, Holly Ventures and angel investors, includes a $25 million Series A. The company, headquartered in Tel Aviv and New York, targets enterprise environments that mix cloud, on‑premises and SaaS workloads. Its platform discovers identities and entitlements, granting access only when needed and revoking it immediately, using dynamic, agent‑less policies that adapt in real time to user behavior and environmental changes. CEO Rotem Lurie emphasizes the need for real‑time, AI‑driven access control to keep pace with modern business operations.

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