Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
SaaS security platform managing risks from SaaS-to-SaaS integrations, OAuth grants, and collaboration tool sprawl. Tel Aviv Israel; raised $25M+;
Valence Security is a SaaS security company founded in 2021 and headquartered in Tel Aviv, Israel. The company identified a growing but underaddressed attack surface: the web of integrations, OAuth grants, and third-party app connections that accumulate as organizations adopt dozens of SaaS applications. Each integration creates a trust relationship that can be exploited if the third-party application is compromised, if a token is leaked, or if permissions are granted far beyond what the use case requires. Valence was built to give security teams full visibility and governance over this SaaS integration mesh.\n\nValence raised $25 million in a Series A round led by Microsoft's M12 venture fund, with participation from YL Ventures and Porsche Ventures. The platform connects to the organization's core SaaS applications — including Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, Salesforce, GitHub, Slack, and Zoom — and discovers all OAuth applications connected to them, the permissions granted, the users who authorized them, and whether the connected applications have known security issues. Security teams can review, revoke, and enforce policies on third-party app access without disrupting end users.\n\nValence's collaboration security capabilities extend beyond OAuth to cover sharing configurations — identifying when sensitive documents, files, or data are shared externally or with overly broad permissions in collaboration tools. The platform also monitors for SaaS misconfigurations and tenant-level security settings that deviate from security baselines. Its remediation workflows allow security teams to alert the responsible users, request justification for sensitive access, or automatically revoke connections that violate policy.
Data platform for security and observability acquired by Cisco for $28B in March 2024. Used by 90 of Fortune 100; 7,500+ enterprise customers globally; flagship SIEM and Splunk SOAR power enterprise security operations centers.
Splunk is a data platform for security and observability founded in 2003 in San Francisco, built on the idea that machine-generated data — logs, events, metrics, traces — contains the intelligence organizations need to detect threats, investigate incidents, and ensure digital systems stay available. The company's core technology indexes and searches massive volumes of machine data in real time, enabling security and IT operations teams to answer complex questions across their entire data estate without predefined schemas.\n\nSplunk's flagship product is its SIEM (Security Information and Event Management) platform, used by 90 of the Fortune 100 to detect and respond to security threats. Its broader portfolio includes Splunk Observability Cloud for infrastructure monitoring, Splunk SOAR for security orchestration and automated response, and Splunk IT Service Intelligence for IT operations. The platform's schema-on-read approach and SPL query language give analysts flexibility to investigate novel threats and operational issues that structured databases cannot accommodate.\n\nSplunk was acquired by Cisco for $28B in March 2024, one of the largest cybersecurity acquisitions in history, and has been integrated into Cisco's AI-driven security portfolio. The combination of Cisco's network telemetry and global customer relationships with Splunk's data analytics depth creates a powerful full-stack security and observability offering. Under Cisco, Splunk is adding AI-native features — including AI Assistant for SPL and automated threat detection — to maintain its leadership position as the SIEM market evolves toward AI-augmented security operations.
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