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enSilo is a technology company.
enSilo developed an advanced endpoint security platform, specializing in Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR). Its core product delivered real-time, automated detection, prevention, and response to evolving cyber threats. The platform employed a prevention-first approach, leveraging patented technology for comprehensive endpoint visibility, blocking malicious code and enabling swift system remediation.
Founded in 2014 by Roy Katmor, Tomer Bitton, and Udi Yavo, enSilo emerged from the insight that traditional security often failed against post-infection threats and data exfiltration. The founders aimed to build a comprehensive defense that actively thwarted breaches and automated incident response within a complex digital landscape.
enSilo's robust platform served businesses requiring stringent protection from data breaches and cyber-attacks. Clients benefited from real-time security via an easy-to-manage, lightweight agent, supporting flexible deployment. The company's vision prioritized unparalleled endpoint protection, securing systems from advanced threats, a mission later integrated into a larger security framework.
enSilo has raised $34.0M across 4 funding rounds.
enSilo has raised $34.0M in total across 4 funding rounds.
enSilo has raised $34.0M in total across 4 funding rounds.
enSilo's investors include Cyberstarts VC, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Norwest Venture Partners, Viola Ventures, Rakesh K. Loonkar, Rembrandt Venture Partners, Ronen Nir.
enSilo is a cybersecurity technology company that builds a real-time Endpoint Protection Platform focused on comprehensive data security for on-premise and cloud environments.[1][2] It serves enterprises, particularly in high-stakes sectors like financial institutions, by solving the problem of advanced threats that bypass traditional antivirus through pre- and post-infection defenses, including Next-Generation Antivirus (NGAV), Application Communication Control, Threat Hunting, and Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR).[1][3][4] The lightweight agent—using under 1% CPU and 50MB RAM—supports legacy Windows and Linux systems, offering togglable features, forensic remediation, ransomware classification, and virtual patching via a cloud dashboard.[1]
Growth momentum stems from its effectiveness against evolving threats like ransomware, with intuitive tools for containment, business intelligence correlation, and customizable support (8x5 basic, upgradable to 24x7 with incident response).[1]
Search results lack specific details on enSilo's founding year, founders, or early backstory, limiting the available narrative to product-focused reviews from around 2018-2020.[1][3] The company emerged in the cybersecurity space by addressing gaps in traditional endpoint defenses, pioneering a unified agent approach that combines prevention and post-breach response—evident in early product tests highlighting its novel "trap" mechanism for threats evading NGAV.[3] Pivotal traction likely came from deployments in ransomware-vulnerable sectors like finance, where its pre/post-infection capabilities demonstrated real-world value.[4]
enSilo rides the endpoint security trend amid rising ransomware and zero-day attacks, where traditional AV fails, emphasizing post-breach resilience in hybrid cloud/on-prem setups.[1][2][3] Timing aligns with the shift to lightweight, agent-based platforms post-2010s EDR boom, favoring its low-overhead design for resource-constrained enterprises.[1] Market forces like regulatory pressures in finance (e.g., against ransomware) boost adoption, as seen in targeted deployments.[4] It influences the ecosystem by normalizing "threat trapping" and unified pre/post protections, pushing competitors toward integrated, behavior-based defenses rather than siloed tools.[3]
enSilo's edge in lightweight, all-in-one endpoint security positions it for expansion amid escalating cyber threats, potentially integrating AI-driven automations for faster response. Trends like zero-trust architectures and cloud-native EDR will shape its path, with opportunities in underserved legacy systems and regulated industries. Its influence may grow through partnerships or acquisitions, solidifying its role in resilient data protection—echoing its core strength in trapping what others miss.[1][3]
enSilo has raised $34.0M across 4 funding rounds. Most recently, it raised $13.0M Series A in April 2017.
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jul 1, 2017 | HyTrust | $36.0M Series E | David Ibnale | Advance Venture Partners, Benhamou Global Ventures, Forgepoint Capital, Signia Venture Partners, Cisco, Epic Ventures, Fortinet, Intel, Sway Ventures, Trident Capital, Vanedge Capital, VMware |
| Apr 1, 2015 | HyTrust | $33.0M Debt / Other Equity | Bill Malloy | Cisco, City National Bank, Epic Ventures, Fortinet, Granite Ventures, Intel, Trident Capital, Moe Kermani, VMware |
| May 20, 2014 | Centrify | $42.0M Other Equity | — | Neil Sundstrom, Neil Sadaranganey, Injong Rhee |
| Aug 1, 2013 | HyTrust | $19.0M Series C | — | Benhamou Global Ventures, Forgepoint Capital, Cisco, Epic Ventures, Michael Xie, Granite Ventures, In-Q-Tel, Arvind Sodhani, Trident Capital, VMware |
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 1, 2017 | $13.0M Series A | Cyberstarts VC, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Norwest Venture Partners, Viola Ventures, Rakesh K. Loonkar | |
| Feb 1, 2016 | $9.0M Series A | Cyberstarts VC, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Norwest Venture Partners, Viola Ventures, Rakesh K. Loonkar, Rembrandt Venture Partners, Viola Ventures | |
| Jun 1, 2015 | $10.0M Series A | Lightspeed Venture Partners | Cyberstarts VC, Norwest Venture Partners, Viola Ventures, Rakesh K. Loonkar, Ronen Nir |
| Mar 1, 2015 | $2.0M Seed | Viola Ventures |