Secure.com announced it has raised $4.5 million as part of a round led by the Disrupt.com AI fund to accelerate the global rollout of its new product, Digital Security Teammates.

The company says the funds will be used for product development, scaling integrations and expanding its go-to-market operations across regions including Middle East, Europe and North America.

What The Platform Does Differently

The "Digital Security Teammates" are AI-native agents that integrate with a company’s existing security stack rather than adding a new dashboard.

They automate tasks including alert triage, incident investigation and compliance workflows. The agents interface in natural language, provide audit-ready explanations, and escalate to human analysts only when needed.

Secure.com reports pre-launch testing showing up to 70 percent faster detection time and a 75 percent faster triage process, with pilot deployments covering finance and healthcare organisations.

Context In A Growing AI-Security Market

Security teams are grappling with rapidly increasing alert volumes, shortage of skilled analysts and growing complexity across cloud, endpoint and identity environments.

By being positioned as an “agent” rather than a tool, Secure.com is tapping into the trend where enterprises expect autonomous support systems rather than additional consoles. This approach aligns with broader movement toward AI-driven SecOps and “analyst-assist” systems in cyber-defense.

Expansion, Integration And Trust Challenges

Secure.com reports its agents already integrate with more than 200 security products including those from Microsoft Sentinel, Splunk, CrowdStrike and Palo Alto Networks.

But for the company to scale, it will need to prove reliability in complex production environments, show zero-false-positive claims at scale, and maintain compliance with global cybersecurity frameworks such as ISO 27001 and regional regulator mandates.

For organisations trusting AI agents to act, transparency, audit logs and strong governance become central parts of adoption decisions.

Funding and Its Significance

Secure.com’s launch illustrates how smaller, regionally headquartered cyber firms are entering global markets with AI-agent-based approaches.

The $4.5 million raise and agent focus reflect investor belief that security automation must evolve beyond human-tool augmentation to autonomous-assistant workflows.

If Secure.com succeeds, the concept of “digital teammate” could become a broader industry expectation across SecOps, shifting how monitoring, investigation and automation are conceived.

Looking Forward

It would be worth watching whether Secure.com publishes case studies with real-world deployment metrics, how quickly customers adopt the agent, and how the platform performs in high-stakes environments such as critical infrastructure and regulated industries.

Also how the company scales its integration ecosystem, pricing model for agent-based workflows, and whether competitors adopt similar agent-first language and products.